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- Jeff Myers, Paul Krueger, Fiona Webster, James Downar, Leonie Herx, Christa Jeney, Doreen Oneschuk, Cori Schroder, Giovanna Sirianni, Dori Seccareccia, Tara Tucker, and Alan Taniguchi.
- 1 Division of Palliative Care, University of Toronto , Ontario, Canada .
- J Palliat Med. 2015 Aug 1; 18 (8): 682-90.
BackgroundEntrustable professional activities (EPAs) are routine tasks considered essential to a professional practice. An EPA can serve as a performance-based outcome that a clinical supervisor would progressively entrust a learner to perform.ObjectiveOur aim was to identify, develop, and validate a set of EPAs for the palliative medicine discipline.MethodsThe design was a sequential qualitative and quantitative mixed methods study. A working group was convened to develop a set of EPAs. Focus groups and surveys were used for validation purposes. Palliative medicine educators and content experts from across Canada participated in both the working group as well as the focus groups. Attendees of the 2014 Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians (CSPCP) annual conference completed surveys. A questionnaire was used to collect survey participant sociodemographic, clinical, and academic information along with ratings of the importance of the EPAs individually and collectively. Cronbach's alpha examined internal consistency of the set of EPAs.ResultsFocus group participants strongly endorsed the 12 EPAs. Virtually all survey participants rated the individual EPAs as being "fairly/very important" (range 94% to 100%). Of the participants, 97% agreed that residents able to perform the set of EPAs would be practicing palliative medicine and 87% indicated strong agreement that this collective set of EPAs captures activities that all palliative medicine physicians must be able to perform. A Cronbach's alpha of 0.841 confirmed good internal consistency.ConclusionsNear uniform agreement from a national group of palliative medicine physicians provides strong validation for the set of 12 EPAs.
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