A review of clinical competence assessment in nursing Chen Yanhua a, , Roger Watson b a Infectious Disease Department of the Afliated Hospital of Luzhou Medical College, Luzhou, China b School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Shefeld, UK summary article info Article history: Accepted 2 May 2011 Keywords: Competence Assessment Nursing Aims: To investigate trends in the evaluation of clinical competence in nursing students and newly qualied nurses over the last 10 years. Design: A literature review following PRISMA guidelines. Methods: The following databases were searched: Cochrane, Medline and CINAHL using the terms competenc*, nurs*and assess*, evaluat*, measure*, from January 2001March 2010. Strict inclusion and exclusion criteria were applied. Results: Twenty three papers were included and these mainly considered the following topics: instrument development and testing; approaches to testing competence; assessment and related factors. A holistic concept of competence is gaining popularity, and consensus around denitions is emerging. Some methods and instruments to measure competence are under systematic development and testing for reliability and validity with large samples and rigorous statistical method. Wider national and international cooperation is evident in competence-based assessment. Conclusions: Competence-based education is evident, but this does not mean that issues related to competence denition have been resolved. Larger and more international cooperation is required to reach common agreement and validity in competence-based education and assessment. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Introduction Watson et al. (2002) published a systematic review of clinical competence assessment in nursing from 1980 to 2000 and argued that the denition of competence was obscure, the measurement of competence was unsystematic and the reliability and validity of measurement tools or strategies was seldom reported. They found that a signicant amount of literatures came from outside nursing. The present paper seeks to examine the situation 10 years on. The Concept of Clinical Competence in Nursing Nearly 10 years later, after Watson et al.'s (2002) review, the denition of competence lacks consensus, remains obscure and contradictory (Cowan et al., 2007; Axley, 2008; Scott Tilley, 2008; Cassidy, 2009; Valloze, 2009) especially, the differentiation between competence and competency (Cowan et al., 2007). However, there is some evidence of progress. Scott Tilley (2008), Axley (2008) and Valloze (2009) used the process of Walker and Avant (1995, 2004) to study the concept of competence and demonstrated different model cases, borderline cases and contrary cases to help clarify the meaning of competence. A holistic competence was accepted by other researchers and statutory bodies (Percival, 2004; Meretoja et al., 2004; ANMC, 2005; Black et al., 2008). In the UK, Cowan et al. (2007) advocated applying a holistic conception of competence including knowledge, skills, performance, attitudes and values and claimed that the use of a holistic concept could enable people to accept this concept and to develop more precise competence standards and assessment instruments. Besides academic debate, the regulatory bodies have also tried to unify the denition of the concept and the framework of nursing clinical competence to reach national or international consensus. In the UK, the Nursing & Midwifery Council (NMC) used the term competence referring to the overarching set of knowledge, skills and attitudes required to practice safely and effectively without direct supervision (NMC, 2010, p. 145), In Australia, in the National Competency Standards for the Registered Nurse (2005, p. 8), competence was dened as a combination of skills, knowledge, attitudes, values and abilities that underpin effective and/or superior performance in a professional/occupational area. In Canada, competence was dened as the ability of the registered nurse to integrate and apply the knowledge, skills, judgments and personal attributes required to practice safely and ethically in a designated role and settingby 10 nursing regulatory bodies cooperatively (Black et al., 2008, p. 173). Although the concept of clinical competence in nursing is not universally dened, as before 2000, progress towards consensus and clarity of the concept is emerging. However, the above literature is based on collaboration and consensus seeking in the design of systems Nurse Education Today 31 (2011) 832836 Corresponding author. Tel.: + 86 13882795016. E-mail address: chen_yanhua25@163.com (C. Yanhua). 0260-6917/$ see front matter © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.nedt.2011.05.003 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Nurse Education Today journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/nedt