Abstract
The practice of medicine involves inherent ambiguity, arising from limitations of knowledge, diagnostic problems, complexities of treatment and outcome and unpredictability of patient response. Research into doctors' tolerance of ambiguity is hampered by poor conceptual clarity and inadequate measurement scales. We aimed to create and pilot a measurement scale for tolerance of ambiguity in medical students and junior doctors that addresses the limitations of existing scales. After defining tolerance of ambiguity, scale items were generated by literature review and expert consultation. Feedback on the draft scale was sought and incorporated. 411 medical students and 75 foundation doctors in Exeter, UK were asked to complete the scale. Psychometric analysis enabled further scale refinement and comparison of scale scores across subgroups. The pilot study achieved a 64% response rate. The final 29 item version of the Tolerance of Ambiguity in Medical Students and Doctors (TAMSAD) scale had good internal reliability (Cronbach's α 0.80). Tolerance of ambiguity was higher in foundation year 2 doctors than first, third and fourth year medical students (-5.23, P = 0.012; -5.98, P = 0.013; -4.62, P = 0.035, for each year group respectively). The TAMSAD scale offers a valid and reliable alternative to existing scales. Further work is required in different settings and in longitudinal studies but this study offers intriguing provisional insights.
DOI
10.1007/s10459-014-9510-z
Publication Date
2015-03-01
Publication Title
Advances in Health Sciences Education
Volume
20
Issue
1
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN
1573-1677
Embargo Period
2024-11-19
First Page
113
Last Page
130
Recommended Citation
Hancock, J., Roberts, M., Monrouxe, L., & Mattick, K. (2015) 'Medical student and junior doctors’ tolerance of ambiguity: development of a new scale', Advances in Health Sciences Education, 20(1), pp. 113-130. Springer Science and Business Media LLC: Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10459-014-9510-z