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American Board of Surgery Examinations: Can We Identify Surgery Residency Applicants Who Will Pass the Examinations on the First Attempt?. John L. Shellito, M.D., Jacqueline S. Osland, M.D., Stephen D. Helmer, Ph.D., Frederic C. Chang, M.D. Department of Surgery
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American Board of Surgery Examinations: Can We Identify Surgery Residency Applicants Who Will Pass the Examinations on the First Attempt? John L. Shellito, M.D., Jacqueline S. Osland, M.D., Stephen D. Helmer, Ph.D., Frederic C. Chang, M.D. Department of Surgery University of Kansas School of Medicine – Wichita
Introduction: The Importance of Board Certification • One of the key demonstrations of the effectiveness of a residency’s training program • ACGME Program Requirements-Surgery • 65% first attempt pass rate for both the qualifying and certifying exam
Objective This study was performed to identify and evaluate factors which predict successful completion of both the American Board of Surgery Qualifying Exam (QE) and Certifying Exam (CE) on the first attempt
Methods • Retrospective review • University of Kansas SOM-Wichita Surgery Residency Program • Included residents entering the program from 1990-2001
Pre-Admission Measures • Age and gender • Class rank • AOA status • Honors in third year surgery clerkship • Interview scores • National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME) Part 1 and Part 2 scores or United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Step 1 and Step 2 scores • Rank list number
Post-admission Measures • American Board of Surgery In Training Examination (ABSITE) scores • Resident awards (Research, Teaching, Outstanding Senior Resident) • Faculty evaluations of the 5th year residents
Statistical Analysis • Univariate analyses were performed using Fischer’s exact test for the dichotomous variables (i.e. gender, AOA status, honors) • Two-sample Wilcoxon rank-sum test was used for continuous variables (i.e. scores, age) and ordinal data • Logistic regression analysis was performed on the pre-admission variables
Results • 77 medical students and residents • 15 subjects excluded • 5 NBME or USMLE scores not available • 8 Left the program • 2 never attempted the QE (both plastic surgeons) • 62 subjects remained after exclusions
UKSM-W Surgery Residency Program 1990-2001 • >90% of our graduates attended medical school in the Midwest (50% from KU) • One foreign medical graduate • 16% (10/62) AOA • Pass rates • First time:77.4% • Eventual: 96.8% • 2/62 (plastic surgery) • Majority entered private practice (73%) • No difference in first time pass rates over the study period
Results • No significant difference based on gender • 50 (80.7%) were male • First time pass rate • 74% for males/ 91.7% for females (p=0.179) • Residents who successfully passed were slightly younger at time of application • 27.1 years vs. 28.6 years (p=0.047)
Results • Cumulative scores for step 1 and 2 • >382 (top 2/3rds) • 81.1% first time pass rate • <382 (bottom 1/3rd) • 42.9% first time pass rate
Results Logistic regression analysis showed Step 1 scores to be the only independent predictor from the group of pre-admission factors for first time pass rates
Results • Residents winning an award during residency had a higher first time pass rate • 92% versus 67% • Faculty evaluations of 5th year residents did not predict board success
Results • Pre-admission factors that failed to predict success for first time pass rates • Honors in 3rd year surgery clerkship • AOA status • 10/10 first time pass rate, p=0.061 • Interview score • Ranking in the match
Discussion • Clerkship grades • Honors grade in third year surgery clerkship • Dean’s letters • Letters of recommendations • Interview Score • Class rank • USMLE scores
Discussion • Xu 1998 • Positive correlation between eventual board certification status and past academic performance • Included other surgical specialties in addition to general surgery • Silber 2005 • Step 2 score single most important predictor for eventual OB/GYN board certification • Graduates from a single medical school, multiple residency programs
Summary This is first study to examine factors predicting first time board certification rates for general surgery residency graduates for both the QE and CE
Limitations • Small sample size • Bias injected from our selection process • No information about the success or failure of applicants who were excluded by our selection committee • Single residency training program
Summary • Academic aptitude by itself does not predict the multifaceted state of competence of a surgeon • Professionalism, manual dexterity, communication abilities, and integrity are not measured by standardized tests • Sorting applicants that are above a certain threshold of intellectual capacity solely by test scores may not be a good way to obtain the best residents
Conclusion Our study indicates a positive correlation between class rank, USMLE scores, ABSITE scores and first time pass rates for ABS certification