Development of an Entrustable Professional Activities (EPA) Framework to Inform Surgical Residency Training Programs in Ethiopia: A Three-round National Delphi Method Study.

2021 
BACKGROUND Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs) have been proposed as a means to translate competencies into clinical practice. Although EPAs for residency training have become available, 1 set of core EPAs cannot automatically be transferred from one context to another due to cultural variability. Further, there is a lack of African- and Asian-based EPA development and implementation studies. We developed an end-of-training EPAs framework to inform surgical residency training programs in the local context of Ethiopian medical education. METHODS A three-round Delphi method was used to establish consensus about important surgical EPAs among experts. A total of 136 experts representing all surgical residency training institutions in Ethiopia were invited to participate. Round 1 & 2 consisted of senior expert panelists (n = 8) to identify potential EPAs and determine the content validity. Round 3 consisted of a survey (n = 128) to further validate the identified EPAs by attending surgeons who work with them. Each EPA had to achieve at least 80% or higher agreement among experts to be considered having acceptable content validity. RESULTS In round 1, a total of 272 EPAs were proposed, reduced, and grouped to 39 consented EPAs. In round 2, the same experts rated each EPA's relevance, resulting in 32 EPAs with a satisfactory item-level content validity index (I-CVI > 0.83). Overall, in the survey in round 3, 29 EPAs met the standard criterion for acceptability (S-CVI/Ave = 0.90) and achieved a high degree of final consensus (ICC = 0.998, 95% CI [0.996, 0.999]; (F = 439.2, p CONCLUSIONS The framework of 29 validated and accepted EPAs can guide future surgical residency training programs in the Ethiopian medical education context. The framework allows programs to move from a time-dependent to an outcome-based model and transforms traditional assessment into entrustment decisions. Thus, the use of the framework can improve the quality of training and patient care in Ehtiopia.
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