Fit for purpose: Ensuring robust, contextually appropriate global accreditation practices

IF 4.9 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES Medical Education Pub Date : 2023-09-21 DOI:10.1111/medu.15238
Carrie Cartmill, Mohammed Ahmed Rashid, Cynthia R. Whitehead
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After localising the WFME standards to the Chinese context, You et al.<span><sup>3</sup></span> conclude that first-round accreditation improves pass rates on China's Medical Licensing Examination. We commend You et al.<span><sup>3</sup></span> for the breadth and scope of their work, which included 105 medical programmes across three ‘tiers’ of schools in China, and for being cautious in assuming that an improvement in licensing exam pass rates will continue beyond the first round of accreditation. You et al.<span><sup>3</sup></span> provide an example of accreditation research that accounts for the unique sociopolitical context of medical education in China. We applaud accreditation research that accounts for historical, social, political and economic contexts. We further propose that as accreditation research expands, both within North America and in geographies with newly acquired accreditation systems, researchers make use of methodologies, tools and metrics that are meaningful and valid; account for political and power dynamics within accreditation systems; and explore the unintended consequences of accreditation.</p><p>You et al.<span><sup>3</sup></span> make comparisons between countries, like their own, that are newly adopting systems of accreditation, and North America, which they describe as having a ‘mature’ accreditation system. The development of accreditation in the United States is described as ‘one of the greatest chapters in the history of the profession’. While we agree that North American accreditation is mature in the sense that it has a longer history than in most countries, accreditation and accreditation research in North America are not without their own challenges. Within North America, there has historically been minimal medical education accreditation scholarship. A 2019 scoping review identified only 203 articles from inception until 2019 on accreditation, with only 36 of these representing rigorous scholarship.<span><sup>2</sup></span> <i>BMC Medical Education</i> published a supplement in 2020 on ‘Current themes and challenges facing Health Professions Education (HPE) accreditation in the 21st century’.<span><sup>4</sup></span> In those six articles, only three countries were represented on the authorship teams (all from the Global North), and only one paper was empirical. This small body of literature on accreditation (even within Global North contexts) suggests that systems of accreditation may not be sufficiently grounded in evidence. You et al.<span><sup>3</sup></span> call for additional quantitative research on accreditation. We agree that additional research is necessary for accreditation to be truly evidence-informed, including studies using diverse research methodologies (including qualitative research), theoretical perspectives and outcome measures.</p><p>You et al.'s<span><sup>3</sup></span> study relies on licensing exam scores as a measure of accreditation impact, a metric that has also been used by other researchers.<span><sup>5-8</sup></span> However, a recent critique proposes that licensing exam scores may be too far removed from the accreditation process itself to be a valid measure of accreditation impact.<span><sup>9</sup></span> Without ensuring that a metric has rigorous construct validity,<span><sup>10</sup></span> it is impossible to determine whether it is truly measuring the phenomenon of interest. It is also impossible to determine from You et al.'s<span><sup>3</sup></span> study what aspects of the implemented accreditation process were responsible for the improvement in licensing exam scores. It is not clear whether the localised WFME standards themselves had an impact on pass rates or whether any newly introduced system of accreditation or quality improvement would also have led to improvement in student outcomes. As accreditation research expands, it will be important to identify valid metrics for measuring the impacts of accreditation and to tease apart specific components that have impact.</p><p>Accreditation is not a politically neutral enterprise, and accreditation research should explore the political implications of global systems of accreditation. You et al.'s<span><sup>3</sup></span> research is attentive to the sociopolitical context of Chinese medical education. They found that localising the WFME standards had different effects within different Chinese medical school contexts: Tier 3 medical schools experienced greater improvements in licensing exam pass rates than Tier 2 and Tier 1 medical schools. In a recent study<span><sup>11</sup></span> of accreditation of undergraduate medical education programmes in Canada, two authors of this commentary similarly found that standardised alterations to the accreditation system had different effects at two schools with different structural and sociopolitical contexts: a longstanding medical school with a centralised structure within an urban setting and a newer rural medical school with a distributed structure. We found that power flowed differently in response to identical accreditation changes, with the effects experienced differently at each school.</p><p>Rationales for the adoption of medical education accreditation include improving education quality, providing optimal learning environments, holding education institutions accountable to meeting societal needs and ensuring that physicians can move seamlessly between contexts.<span><sup>12, 13</sup></span> While research should aim to evaluate whether these goals are being met, it should also seek to provide an understanding of the unintended consequences of accreditation and accreditation change. Scholars have noted the complexity of developing accreditation standards that meet both local and global needs in non-EuroAmerican contexts, including structural, regulatory, developmental and aspirational complexities.<span><sup>14</sup></span> Others have identified key barriers that low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) face when attempting to design systems of accreditation.<span><sup>15</sup></span> Countries that adopt/adapt universal standards face the double burden of developing accreditation programmes that meet global expectations (or those of the Global North/United States)<span><sup>16</sup></span> and meeting the needs of their local populations. Accreditation is a resource-intensive process, and for LMICs, this may mean that resources are being diverted from other important aspects of health care and education.<span><sup>16</sup></span></p><p>Another critique of adopting WFME accreditation standards across diverse global contexts relates to risks of imposing values from dominant countries when standardising medical education across the globe.<span><sup>17</sup></span> As countries adopt accreditation systems that are recognised by the WFME, this allows their students to meet the requirements of the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) for entry to US residency programmes.<span><sup>18</sup></span> Will this encourage a migration of medical trainees from LMICs to the United States, thereby increasing brain-drain and worsening inequities in the Global South?<span><sup>16</sup></span> Research should explore these unintended consequences to safeguard against greater harm accruing in LMICs. Taber et al.<span><sup>13</sup></span> argue that a ‘fit for purpose’ approach to accreditation design is necessary for ensuring that different accreditation systems are optimally adapted to their political, social and economic context. We agree and would add that accreditation research must also be creatively designed to move beyond measuring pass rates on licensing exams, while considering the larger and unintended impacts of accreditation on local populations.</p><p>All authors contributed to the conceptualisation and drafting of the original manuscript draft.</p>","PeriodicalId":18370,"journal":{"name":"Medical Education","volume":"58 2","pages":"180-182"},"PeriodicalIF":4.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/medu.15238","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Medical Education","FirstCategoryId":"95","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/medu.15238","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"教育学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Medical school accreditation has become an increasingly popular tool for ensuring high quality training of medical doctors across the globe, with global systems of accreditation being strongly encouraged by the World Health Assembly, World Medical Association and the World Federation for Medical Education (WFME).1 Despite this growing trend towards standardisation, medical school accreditation has only recently become a topic of research inquiry.2 The article by You et al.3 in this issue adds important data to the accreditation evidence base. After localising the WFME standards to the Chinese context, You et al.3 conclude that first-round accreditation improves pass rates on China's Medical Licensing Examination. We commend You et al.3 for the breadth and scope of their work, which included 105 medical programmes across three ‘tiers’ of schools in China, and for being cautious in assuming that an improvement in licensing exam pass rates will continue beyond the first round of accreditation. You et al.3 provide an example of accreditation research that accounts for the unique sociopolitical context of medical education in China. We applaud accreditation research that accounts for historical, social, political and economic contexts. We further propose that as accreditation research expands, both within North America and in geographies with newly acquired accreditation systems, researchers make use of methodologies, tools and metrics that are meaningful and valid; account for political and power dynamics within accreditation systems; and explore the unintended consequences of accreditation.

You et al.3 make comparisons between countries, like their own, that are newly adopting systems of accreditation, and North America, which they describe as having a ‘mature’ accreditation system. The development of accreditation in the United States is described as ‘one of the greatest chapters in the history of the profession’. While we agree that North American accreditation is mature in the sense that it has a longer history than in most countries, accreditation and accreditation research in North America are not without their own challenges. Within North America, there has historically been minimal medical education accreditation scholarship. A 2019 scoping review identified only 203 articles from inception until 2019 on accreditation, with only 36 of these representing rigorous scholarship.2 BMC Medical Education published a supplement in 2020 on ‘Current themes and challenges facing Health Professions Education (HPE) accreditation in the 21st century’.4 In those six articles, only three countries were represented on the authorship teams (all from the Global North), and only one paper was empirical. This small body of literature on accreditation (even within Global North contexts) suggests that systems of accreditation may not be sufficiently grounded in evidence. You et al.3 call for additional quantitative research on accreditation. We agree that additional research is necessary for accreditation to be truly evidence-informed, including studies using diverse research methodologies (including qualitative research), theoretical perspectives and outcome measures.

You et al.'s3 study relies on licensing exam scores as a measure of accreditation impact, a metric that has also been used by other researchers.5-8 However, a recent critique proposes that licensing exam scores may be too far removed from the accreditation process itself to be a valid measure of accreditation impact.9 Without ensuring that a metric has rigorous construct validity,10 it is impossible to determine whether it is truly measuring the phenomenon of interest. It is also impossible to determine from You et al.'s3 study what aspects of the implemented accreditation process were responsible for the improvement in licensing exam scores. It is not clear whether the localised WFME standards themselves had an impact on pass rates or whether any newly introduced system of accreditation or quality improvement would also have led to improvement in student outcomes. As accreditation research expands, it will be important to identify valid metrics for measuring the impacts of accreditation and to tease apart specific components that have impact.

Accreditation is not a politically neutral enterprise, and accreditation research should explore the political implications of global systems of accreditation. You et al.'s3 research is attentive to the sociopolitical context of Chinese medical education. They found that localising the WFME standards had different effects within different Chinese medical school contexts: Tier 3 medical schools experienced greater improvements in licensing exam pass rates than Tier 2 and Tier 1 medical schools. In a recent study11 of accreditation of undergraduate medical education programmes in Canada, two authors of this commentary similarly found that standardised alterations to the accreditation system had different effects at two schools with different structural and sociopolitical contexts: a longstanding medical school with a centralised structure within an urban setting and a newer rural medical school with a distributed structure. We found that power flowed differently in response to identical accreditation changes, with the effects experienced differently at each school.

Rationales for the adoption of medical education accreditation include improving education quality, providing optimal learning environments, holding education institutions accountable to meeting societal needs and ensuring that physicians can move seamlessly between contexts.12, 13 While research should aim to evaluate whether these goals are being met, it should also seek to provide an understanding of the unintended consequences of accreditation and accreditation change. Scholars have noted the complexity of developing accreditation standards that meet both local and global needs in non-EuroAmerican contexts, including structural, regulatory, developmental and aspirational complexities.14 Others have identified key barriers that low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) face when attempting to design systems of accreditation.15 Countries that adopt/adapt universal standards face the double burden of developing accreditation programmes that meet global expectations (or those of the Global North/United States)16 and meeting the needs of their local populations. Accreditation is a resource-intensive process, and for LMICs, this may mean that resources are being diverted from other important aspects of health care and education.16

Another critique of adopting WFME accreditation standards across diverse global contexts relates to risks of imposing values from dominant countries when standardising medical education across the globe.17 As countries adopt accreditation systems that are recognised by the WFME, this allows their students to meet the requirements of the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) for entry to US residency programmes.18 Will this encourage a migration of medical trainees from LMICs to the United States, thereby increasing brain-drain and worsening inequities in the Global South?16 Research should explore these unintended consequences to safeguard against greater harm accruing in LMICs. Taber et al.13 argue that a ‘fit for purpose’ approach to accreditation design is necessary for ensuring that different accreditation systems are optimally adapted to their political, social and economic context. We agree and would add that accreditation research must also be creatively designed to move beyond measuring pass rates on licensing exams, while considering the larger and unintended impacts of accreditation on local populations.

All authors contributed to the conceptualisation and drafting of the original manuscript draft.

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符合目的:确保稳健、符合实际情况的全球认证实践。
随着世界卫生大会、世界医学会和世界医学教育联合会(WFME)大力鼓励建立全球评审体系,医学院校评审已成为确保全球医生高质量培训的一种日益流行的工具。1 尽管标准化趋势日益明显,医学院校评审最近才成为一个研究课题。在将世界医学教育联合会的标准本土化以适应中国国情后,You 等人3 得出结论:第一轮评审提高了中国医师资格考试的通过率。You 等人 3 的工作涉及中国三个 "层次 "学校的 105 个医学课程,工作范围广泛,我们对他们的工作表示赞赏,同时也对他们谨慎地假设执业医师资格考试通过率的提高将持续到第一轮认证之后表示赞赏。You 等人3 提供了一个评审研究的范例,说明了中国医学教育独特的社会政治背景。我们对考虑到历史、社会、政治和经济背景的评审研究表示赞赏。我们进一步建议,随着评审研究的扩展,无论是在北美还是在新近采用评审制度的地区,研究人员都应使用有意义和有效的方法、工具和衡量标准;考虑评审制度中的政治和权力动态;并探索评审的意外后果。 You et al.3 将像他们本国这样新近采用评审制度的国家与他们所描述的拥有 "成熟 "评审制度的北美进行了比较。美国的评审发展被描述为 "该行业历史上最伟大的篇章之一"。虽然我们同意北美的资质认定已经成熟,因为它的历史比大多数国家都要长,但北美的资质认定和资质认定研究也并非没有自身的挑战。在北美,医学教育评审学术研究历来很少。2 BMC Medical Education 于 2020 年发表了一篇关于 "21 世纪健康职业教育(HPE)评审面临的当前主题和挑战 "的增刊。4 在这六篇文章中,作者团队中只有三个国家的代表(均来自全球北方),只有一篇论文是实证性的。4 在这六篇文章中,作者团队中只有三个国家的代表(均来自全球北方国家),只有一篇论文是实证性的。有关资格认证的文献数量很少(即使是在全球北方国家的情况下),这表明资格认证体系可能没有充分的实证依据。You 等人3 呼吁对资格认证开展更多的定量研究。我们同意,有必要开展更多的研究,包括采用不同研究方法(包括定性研究)、理论视角和结果衡量标准的研究,使资格认证真正有据可依。You 等人3 的研究以执照考试分数作为衡量资格认证影响的标准,其他研究人员也采用了这一标准。9 如果不确保指标具有严格的建构效度10 ,就无法确定其是否真正衡量了所关注的现象。从 You 等人的研究3 中也无法确定实施的评审程序的哪些方面对执业资格考试成绩的提高起了作用。尚不清楚本地化的 WFME 标准本身是否对通过率产生了影响,也不清楚任何新引入的评审或质量改进系统是否也会导致学生成绩的提高。随着资格认证研究的不断扩大,确定衡量资格认证影响的有效指标并区分产生影响的具体组成部分将变得非常重要。资格认证不是一项政治中立的事业,资格认证研究应探讨全球资格认证体系的政治影响。You 等人3 的研究关注中国医学教育的社会政治背景。他们发现,WFME 标准的本土化在不同的中国医学院背景下产生了不同的效果:与二级和一级医学院校相比,三级医学院校的执业医师资格考试通过率提高幅度更大。
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来源期刊
Medical Education
Medical Education 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
279
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical Education seeks to be the pre-eminent journal in the field of education for health care professionals, and publishes material of the highest quality, reflecting world wide or provocative issues and perspectives. The journal welcomes high quality papers on all aspects of health professional education including; -undergraduate education -postgraduate training -continuing professional development -interprofessional education
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