Nc. Dolan et Mm. Mcdermott, USING UNIDENTIFIED STANDARDIZED PATIENTS TO EVALUATE HOUSESTAFF DELIVERY OF PREVENTIVE SERVICES, Teaching and learning in medicine, 9(1), 1997, pp. 60-65
Background: Scheduling unidentified standardized patients (SPs) into p
hysician outpatient practices to assess quality of care and physician
performance has been used infrequently for housestaff evaluation. The
article's purpose is to describe the feasibility and acceptability of
using unidentified SPs for evaluation of housestaff performance of the
clinical breast examination and other preventive practices in the out
patient setting. Description: SPs, posing as new patients with an unco
mplicated medical history, were scheduled pseudonyms into the clinics
of 20 randomly selected consenting residents. Following each encounter
, the SPs completed an evaluation checklist on prespecified aspects of
the history and physical. Evaluation: Four (20%) of the residents who
actually had an SP encounter suspected that they had seen an SP, and
7 (21%) of the 34 consenting housestaff who actually did not see an SP
thought that they had. At the end of the study, none of the housestaf
f had expressed a reluctance to participant in the unidentified SP eva
luation and 39 (83%) stated they would participate in a similar evalua
tion in the future. Seventeen (36%) of all surveyed housestaff felt th
e SP evaluation had no effect on overall patient care, whereas 30 (64%
) felt it had a positive effect on patient care. Conclusions: The use
of unidentified SPs in the outpatient setting is a feasible method of
evaluation that was acceptable to the majority of internal medicine ho
usestaff at our institution without appearing to negatively impact on
patient care.