"The Questions Shape the Answers": Assessing the Quality of Published Survey Instruments in Health Professions Education Research
- PMID: 29095172
- DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002002
"The Questions Shape the Answers": Assessing the Quality of Published Survey Instruments in Health Professions Education Research
Abstract
Purpose: Surveys are widely used in health professions education (HPE) research, yet little is known about the quality of the instruments employed. Poorly designed survey tools containing unclear or poorly formatted items can be difficult for respondents to interpret and answer, yielding low-quality data. This study assessed the quality of published survey instruments in HPE.
Method: In 2017, the authors performed an analysis of HPE research articles published in three high-impact journals in 2013. They included articles that employed at least one self-administered survey. They designed a coding rubric addressing five violations of established best practices for survey item design and used it to collect descriptive data on the validity and reliability evidence reported and to assess the quality of available survey items.
Results: Thirty-six articles met inclusion criteria and included the instrument for coding, with one article using 2 surveys, yielding 37 unique surveys. Authors reported validity and reliability evidence for 13 (35.1%) and 8 (21.6%) surveys, respectively. Results of the item-quality assessment revealed that a substantial proportion of published survey instruments violated established best practices in the design and visual layout of Likert-type rating items. Overall, 35 (94.6%) of the 37 survey instruments analyzed contained at least one violation of best practices.
Conclusions: The majority of articles failed to report validity and reliability evidence, and a substantial proportion of the survey instruments violated established best practices in survey design. The authors suggest areas of future inquiry and provide several improvement recommendations for HPE researchers, reviewers, and journal editors.
Comment in
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Guidelines for Reporting Survey-Based Research Submitted to Academic Medicine.Acad Med. 2018 Mar;93(3):337-340. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002094. Acad Med. 2018. PMID: 29485492 No abstract available.
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Using Rasch Measurement to Revisit Survey Checklist Items.Acad Med. 2018 Nov;93(11):1603. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002421. Acad Med. 2018. PMID: 30376523 No abstract available.
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