The Florida Clinical Skills Collaborative: A New Regional Consortium for the Assessment of Clinical Skills. Article

Toonkel, Rebecca, Castiglioni, Analia, Danforth, Debra et al. (2022). The Florida Clinical Skills Collaborative: A New Regional Consortium for the Assessment of Clinical Skills. . 14(11), e31263. 10.7759/cureus.31263

cited authors

  • Toonkel, Rebecca; Castiglioni, Analia; Danforth, Debra; Fine, Lauren; Foster, Jennifer; Jacomino, Mario; Johnson, Michelle; Keller, Bridget; Mendez, Paul; Saunders, John M; Scalese, Ross; Schocken, Dawn M; Stalvey, Carolyn; Stevens, Maria; Suchak, Niharika; Syms, Samantha; Uchiyama, Emiri; Velazquez, Maria

abstract

  • Discontinuation of the United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Step 2 Clinical Skills (CS) exam and Comprehensive Osteopathic Medical Licensing Examination (COMLEX) Level 2 Performance Evaluation (2-PE) raised questions about the ability of medical schools to ensure the clinical skills competence of graduating students. In February 2021, representatives from all Florida, United States, allopathic and osteopathic schools initiated a collaboration to address this critically important issue in the evolving landscape of medical education. A 5-point Likert scale survey of all members (n=18/20 individuals representing 10/10 institutions) reveals that initial interest in joining the collaboration was high among both individuals (mean 4.78, SD 0.43) and institutions (mean 4.69, SD 0.48). Most individuals (mean 4.78, SD 0.55) and institutions (mean 4.53, SD 0.72) are highly satisfied with their decision to join. Members most commonly cited a "desire to establish a shared assessment in place of Step 2 CS/2-PE" as their most important reason for joining. Experienced benefits of membership were ranked as the following: 1) Networking, 2) Shared resources for curriculum implementation, 3) Scholarship, and 4) Work towards a shared assessment in place of Step 2 CS/2-PE. Challenges of membership were ranked as the following: 1) Logistics such as scheduling and technology, 2) Agreement on common goals, 3) Total time commitment, and 4) Large group size. Members cited the "administration of a joint assessment pilot" as the highest priority for the coming year. Florida has successfully launched a regional consortium for the assessment of clinical skills competency with high levels of member satisfaction which may serve as a model for future regional consortia.

publication date

  • November 1, 2022

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Medium

  • Electronic-eCollection

start page

  • e31263

volume

  • 14

issue

  • 11