BMC Medical Education (May 2020)

Codebook for rating clinical communication skills based on the Calgary-Cambridge Guide

  • Else Dalsgaard Iversen,
  • Maiken Overbeck Wolderslund,
  • Poul-Erik Kofoed,
  • Pål Gulbrandsen,
  • Helle Poulsen,
  • Søren Cold,
  • Jette Ammentorp

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-020-02050-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background The aim of the study was to confirm the validity and reliability of the Observation Scheme-12, a measurement tool for rating clinical communication skills. Methods The study is a sub-study of an intervention study using audio recordings to assess the outcome of communication skills training. This paper describes the methods used to validate the assessment tool Observation Scheme-12 by operationalizing the crude 5-point scale into specific elements described in a codebook. Reliability was tested by calculating the intraclass correlation coefficients for interrater and intrarater reliability. Results The validation of the Observation Scheme-12 produced a rating tool with 12 items. Each item has 0 to 5 described micro-skills. For each item, the codebook described the criteria for delivering a rating from 0 to 4 depending on how successful the different micro-skills (or number of used jargon words) was accomplished. Testing reliability for the overall score intraclass correlation coefficients was 0.74 for interrater reliability and 0.86 for intrarater reliability. An intraclass correlation coefficient greater than 0.5 was observed for 10 of 12 items. Conclusion The development of a codebook as a supplement to the assessment tool Observation Scheme-12 enables an objective rating of audiotaped clinical communication with acceptable reliability. The Observation Scheme-12 can be used to assess communication skills based on the Calgary-Cambridge Guide.

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