Predicting medical graduates’ clinical performance using national competency examination results in Indonesia

Background: Indonesia has applied a national competency exit-examination for medical graduates since 2014, called The Indonesia Medical Doctor National Competency Examination (IMDNCE). This examination is administered to ensure the competence of medical graduates from at present 83 medical schools i...

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Main Authors: Utomo, Prattama Santoso, Randita, Amandha Boy Timor, Riskiyana, Rilani, Kurniawan, Felicia, Aras, Irwin, Abrori, Cholis, Rahayu, Gandes Retno
Format: Article PeerReviewed
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central Ltd 2022
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Online Access:https://repository.ugm.ac.id/283915/1/s12909-022-03321-x.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/283915/
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spelling id-ugm-repo.2839152023-11-24T02:37:57Z https://repository.ugm.ac.id/283915/ Predicting medical graduates’ clinical performance using national competency examination results in Indonesia Utomo, Prattama Santoso Randita, Amandha Boy Timor Riskiyana, Rilani Kurniawan, Felicia Aras, Irwin Abrori, Cholis Rahayu, Gandes Retno Clinical Chemistry (diagnostics) Clinical Sciences not elsewhere classified Background: Indonesia has applied a national competency exit-examination for medical graduates since 2014, called The Indonesia Medical Doctor National Competency Examination (IMDNCE). This examination is administered to ensure the competence of medical graduates from at present 83 medical schools in Indonesia. Although many studies reported their evaluation on medical licensing examinations, there are not many studies performed to evaluate the correlation of a national licensing examination to the graduates’ clinical practice. Aims: This research aimed to evaluate the performance of new medical doctors in Indonesia in their internship period after the IMDNCE completion, and whether it might become a predictive indicator for the new medical doctors’ clinical performance. Methods: An observational cross-sectional study was performed in November–December 2017 on 209 doctors who were new medical graduates. Thirty-one senior doctors from a range of regions in Indonesia who were recruited and trained previously participated in the observation. The Clinical Performance Instrument (CPI) tool was developed as an evaluation tool of the new doctors’ clinical competence to be observed for three weeks. The obtained data were analysed using descriptive statistics and correlated to the IMDNCE scores. Results: The mean (95 CI) of the CPI for all participants was 83.0 (80.8–85.2), with no correlation of CPI score with IMDNCE results in domains of communication, professionalism and patient safety (p > 0.05). However, the mean total of the CPI observation scores from doctors who graduated from public medical schools was higher than those graduating from private medical schools. Also, there were differences in scores related to the institution’s accreditation grade (p < 0.05). Conclusion: There is no difference between CPI and national competency examination results. There was no statistical correlation between the clinical performance of new medical doctors during their internship to CBT and OSCE scores in the national competency examination. New doctors’ performance during internship is affected by more complex factors, not only their level of competencies. © 2022, The Author(s). BioMed Central Ltd 2022 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repository.ugm.ac.id/283915/1/s12909-022-03321-x.pdf Utomo, Prattama Santoso and Randita, Amandha Boy Timor and Riskiyana, Rilani and Kurniawan, Felicia and Aras, Irwin and Abrori, Cholis and Rahayu, Gandes Retno (2022) Predicting medical graduates’ clinical performance using national competency examination results in Indonesia. BMC Medical Education, 22 (1). pp. 1-8. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85127952809&doi=10.1186%2fs12909-022-03321-x&partnerID=40&md5=f464f54b88829757116dcf424c8dfd52 10.1186/s12909-022-03321-x
institution Universitas Gadjah Mada
building UGM Library
continent Asia
country Indonesia
Indonesia
content_provider UGM Library
collection Repository Civitas UGM
language English
topic Clinical Chemistry (diagnostics)
Clinical Sciences not elsewhere classified
spellingShingle Clinical Chemistry (diagnostics)
Clinical Sciences not elsewhere classified
Utomo, Prattama Santoso
Randita, Amandha Boy Timor
Riskiyana, Rilani
Kurniawan, Felicia
Aras, Irwin
Abrori, Cholis
Rahayu, Gandes Retno
Predicting medical graduates’ clinical performance using national competency examination results in Indonesia
description Background: Indonesia has applied a national competency exit-examination for medical graduates since 2014, called The Indonesia Medical Doctor National Competency Examination (IMDNCE). This examination is administered to ensure the competence of medical graduates from at present 83 medical schools in Indonesia. Although many studies reported their evaluation on medical licensing examinations, there are not many studies performed to evaluate the correlation of a national licensing examination to the graduates’ clinical practice. Aims: This research aimed to evaluate the performance of new medical doctors in Indonesia in their internship period after the IMDNCE completion, and whether it might become a predictive indicator for the new medical doctors’ clinical performance. Methods: An observational cross-sectional study was performed in November–December 2017 on 209 doctors who were new medical graduates. Thirty-one senior doctors from a range of regions in Indonesia who were recruited and trained previously participated in the observation. The Clinical Performance Instrument (CPI) tool was developed as an evaluation tool of the new doctors’ clinical competence to be observed for three weeks. The obtained data were analysed using descriptive statistics and correlated to the IMDNCE scores. Results: The mean (95 CI) of the CPI for all participants was 83.0 (80.8–85.2), with no correlation of CPI score with IMDNCE results in domains of communication, professionalism and patient safety (p > 0.05). However, the mean total of the CPI observation scores from doctors who graduated from public medical schools was higher than those graduating from private medical schools. Also, there were differences in scores related to the institution’s accreditation grade (p < 0.05). Conclusion: There is no difference between CPI and national competency examination results. There was no statistical correlation between the clinical performance of new medical doctors during their internship to CBT and OSCE scores in the national competency examination. New doctors’ performance during internship is affected by more complex factors, not only their level of competencies. © 2022, The Author(s).
format Article
PeerReviewed
author Utomo, Prattama Santoso
Randita, Amandha Boy Timor
Riskiyana, Rilani
Kurniawan, Felicia
Aras, Irwin
Abrori, Cholis
Rahayu, Gandes Retno
author_facet Utomo, Prattama Santoso
Randita, Amandha Boy Timor
Riskiyana, Rilani
Kurniawan, Felicia
Aras, Irwin
Abrori, Cholis
Rahayu, Gandes Retno
author_sort Utomo, Prattama Santoso
title Predicting medical graduates’ clinical performance using national competency examination results in Indonesia
title_short Predicting medical graduates’ clinical performance using national competency examination results in Indonesia
title_full Predicting medical graduates’ clinical performance using national competency examination results in Indonesia
title_fullStr Predicting medical graduates’ clinical performance using national competency examination results in Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Predicting medical graduates’ clinical performance using national competency examination results in Indonesia
title_sort predicting medical graduates’ clinical performance using national competency examination results in indonesia
publisher BioMed Central Ltd
publishDate 2022
url https://repository.ugm.ac.id/283915/1/s12909-022-03321-x.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/283915/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85127952809&doi=10.1186%2fs12909-022-03321-x&partnerID=40&md5=f464f54b88829757116dcf424c8dfd52
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