Development and Initial Evaluation of Psychometric Properties of a Pain Competence Assessment Tool (PCAT) - 08/03/22

, Bonnie Stevens †, ‡, §, Judy Watt-Watson †, §, Sharon Switzer-McIntyre †, ¶, John Flannery *, Andrea Furlan *, †Highlights |
• | The Pain competence assessment tool (PCAT) is an online competency-based assessment tool relevant to different healthcare practitioners. |
• | The PCAT assesses pain management core competencies focusing on chronic pain. |
• | The PCAT consists of 5 case scenarios followed by 17 key-feature questions. |
• | The new PCAT showed adequate content validity, responsiveness, reliability, and discriminative validity. |
• | The PCAT can be used to assess the effectiveness of interprofessional educational interventions. |
Abstract |
Competency-based education is now considered the best approach for pain educational programs provided for pre and postgraduate healthcare providers (HCPs). To demonstrate learners’ progression, an assessment tool that aligns with this educational approach and targets different HCPs is needed. A Pain Competence Assessment Tool (PCAT) was developed based on the pain management core competencies that align with the International Association for the Study of Pain interprofessional pain curriculum. The PCAT is an online competency-based assessment tool for HCPs that consists of 5 case scenarios followed by 17 key-feature questions. HCPs and trainees completed the PCAT through a series of studies to assess its psychometric properties. The preliminary evaluation suggested that the PCAT had adequate content validity. Apart from 6 questions, the PCAT questions demonstrated homogeneity and acceptable reliability, and substantial stability. No ceiling or floor effect was found. A significant difference was detected between the HCPs' and trainees’ scores. The PCAT scores strongly correlated with other variables reflecting different competence levels. The PCAT scores showed significant changes in the baseline scores compared to scores after attending an educational intervention. The PCAT offers a first-of-its-kind tool for assessing HCPs' competence (ie, knowledge and its application) in managing chronic pain. Future research is needed for further validation and adaptation of the PCAT.
Perspective |
The Pain Competence Assessment Tool (PCAT) offers a first-of-its-kind tool for assessing clinicians' core competencies that overlap between different professions and support the clinicians’ capacity to successfully manage chronic pain in the real world focusing on the patient-centered perspective rather than the profession-specific perspective.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key words : Chronic pain, competency assessment, interprofessional, validity, reliability
Plan
| This project was funded by the Musculoskeletal Program at Toronto Rehabilitation Institute at University Health Network. Samah Hassan received funds from the Supervisor Grant from the Canadian Institute for Health Research. |
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| The authors declare no conflict of interest. |
Vol 23 - N° 3
P. 398-410 - mars 2022 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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