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Kevin Spencer,Hon Keung Yuen,Max Darwin,Gavin Jenkins,Kimberly Kirklin 한국보건의료인국가시험원 2019 보건의료교육평가 Vol.16 No.-
PurposeThis study was conducted to describe the development and validation of the Hocus Focus Magic Performance Evaluation Scale (HFMPES), which is used to evaluate the competency of health professions personnel in delivering magic tricks as a therapeutic modality. MethodsA 2-phase validation process was used. Phase I (content validation) involved 16 magician judges who independently rated the relevance of each of the 5 items in the HFMPES and established the veracity of its content. Phase II evaluated the psychometric properties of the HFMPES. This process involved 2 magicians using the HFMPES to independently evaluate 73 occupational therapy graduate students demonstrating 3 magic tricks. ResultsThe HFMPES achieved an excellent scale-content validity index of 0.99. Exploratory factor analysis of the HFMPES scores revealed 1 distinct factor with alpha coefficients ≥0.8 across the 3 magic tricks. The construct validity of the HFMPES scores was further supported by evidence from a known-groups analysis, in which the Mann-Whitney U-test showed significant difference in HFMPES scores between participants with different levels of experience in delivering the 3 magic tricks. The inter-rater reliability coefficients were ≥0.75 across the 3 magic tricks, indicating that the competency of health professions personnel in delivering the 3 magic tricks could be evaluated precisely. ConclusionPreliminary evidence supported the content and construct validity of the HFMPES, which was found to have good internal consistency and inter-rater reliability in evaluating health professions personnel’s competency in delivering magic tricks.
James D. St. Louis,이철,Hiromi Kurosawa,Richard A. Jonas,Sakamoto Kisaburo,Christo I. Tchervenkov,Jeffery P. Jacobs,James K. Kirklin 대한흉부외과학회 2018 Journal of Chest Surgery (J Chest Surg) Vol.51 No.1
More than a decade has elapsed since the historic inaugural meeting of the World Society for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Surgery (WSPCHS). The leaders and participants of this event were motivated and inspired by the prospect of a new era of global communication in the field of congenital heart disease. Their mission, galvanized by the ratification of the society’s constitution, directed new members to promulgate efforts to “promote the highest quality of comprehensive cardiac care to all patients with congenital heart disease across the globe,” with a message that would be realized for decades to come [1].