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A clinical assessment tool used for physiotherapy students - Is it reliable? Physiotherapy theory and practice [Physiother Theory Pract] Journal article

 
TitleA clinical assessment tool used for physiotherapy students - Is it reliable?
Author(s)Lewis LK, Stiller K, Hardy F 
InstitutionSenior Physiotherapist, Clinical Education, PhD Candidate, University of South Australia, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, Australia.
SourcePhysiother Theory Pract 2008 Mar-Apr; 24(2):121-34.
AbstractEducational institutions providing professional programs such as physiotherapy must provide high-quality student assessment procedures. To ensure that assessment is consistent, assessment tools should have an acceptable level of reliability. There is a paucity of research evaluating the reliability of clinical assessment tools used for physiotherapy students. This study evaluated the inter- and intrarater reliability of an assessment tool used for physiotherapy students during a clinical placement. Five clinical educators and one academic participated in the study. Each rater independently marked 22 student written assessments that had been completed by students after viewing a videotaped patient physiotherapy assessment. The raters repeated the marking process 7 weeks later, with the assessments provided in a randomised order. The interrater reliability (Intraclass Correlation Coefficient) for the total scores was 0.32, representing a poor level of reliability. A high level of intrarater reliability (percentage agreement) was found for the clinical educators, with a difference in section scores of one mark or less on 93.4% of occasions. Further research should be undertaken to reevaluate the reliability of this clinical assessment tool following training. The reliability of clinical assessment tools used in other areas of physiotherapy education should be formally measured rather than assumed.
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
PubMed ID18432515
  
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