Cost and logistics for implementing the American College of Surgeons objective structured clinical examination.
BACKGROUND: The American College of Surgeons has developed a reliable and valid OSCE (objective structured clinical examination) to assess the clinical skills of incoming postgraduate year 1 surgery residents, but the cost and logistics of implementation have not been described. METHODS: Fixed costs included staff time, medical supplies, facility fee, standardized patient (SP) training time, and one OSCE session. Variable costs were incurred for additional OSCE sessions. Costs per resident were calculated and modeled for increasing the number of test takers. RESULTS: American College of Surgeons OSCE materials and examination facilities were free. Fixed costs included training 11 SPs for 4 hours ($1,540), moulage and simulation material ($469), and administrative effort for 44 hours ($2,200). Variable cost for each session was $1,540 (SP time). Total cost for the first session was $6,649 ($664/resident), decreased to $324/resident for 3 sessions, and projected to further decline to $239/resident for 6 sessions. CONCLUSIONS: The cost decreased as the number of residents tested increased. To manage costs, testing more trainees by regional collaboration is recommended.
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- United States
- Surgery
- Program Evaluation
- Internship and Residency
- Humans
- General Surgery
- Educational Measurement
- Curriculum
- Costs and Cost Analysis
- Clinical Competence
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- United States
- Surgery
- Program Evaluation
- Internship and Residency
- Humans
- General Surgery
- Educational Measurement
- Curriculum
- Costs and Cost Analysis
- Clinical Competence