Camp Christopher L, Degen Ryan M, Hanssen Arlen D, Dines Joshua S, Karam Matthew D, Turner Norman S
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.
Sports Medicine and Shoulder Service, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York.
J Surg Educ. 2018 Jan-Feb;75(1):164-170. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2017.06.017. Epub 2017 Jun 30.
The purpose of this work was to compare resident and program director (PD) perspectives on the value of the Orthopaedic In-Training Examination (OITE), resident study habits, and best resources for optimal performance.
A national survey of orthopedic surgery residents and PDs.
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN PARTICIPANTS: The survey was completed by 445 (41.5%) eligible orthopedic surgery residents and 37 (77.1%) PDs.
Although residents and PDs agreed on when (p = 0.896) and how much (p = 0.171) residents currently study, residents felt that the OITE was not as valuable of an assessment of their knowledge, and also felt their individual scores were less likely to remain confidential compared to PDs (p < 0.001). The mean OITE score below which residents were concerned about their ability to pass American Board of Orthopaedic Surgeons Part 1 was 9.7 percentile points higher than PDs threshold (42.3% vs. 32.6%, respectively, p = 0.003). Both groups agreed that it is important to dedicate focused study time to the OITE (p = 0.680) and to perform well (p = 0.099). Regarding the best resources and preparation strategies, both residents and PDs tended to agree on the value of most (6 of 10) study methods. Residents ranked practice question websites (mean ranking of 2.6 vs. 3.8 of 10, respectively; p < 0.001) and formal rotations in a subspecialty (6.0 vs. 7.7 respectively, p < 0.001) higher than PDs. In contrast, PDs tended to value their program's formal OITE prep program (4.1. vs. 5.3, respectively, p = 0.012) and reading primary literature (5.6 vs. 6.6, respectively, p = 0.012) more than residents.
Residents and PDs agreed on many critical components of this process; however, a number of key differences in perspectives exist.
本研究旨在比较住院医师和项目主任(PD)对骨科住院医师培训考试(OITE)的价值、住院医师学习习惯以及取得最佳成绩的最佳资源的看法。
对骨科住院医师和项目主任进行全国性调查。
明尼苏达州罗切斯特市梅奥诊所
445名(41.5%)符合条件的骨科住院医师和37名(77.1%)项目主任完成了调查。
尽管住院医师和项目主任在住院医师目前的学习时间(p = 0.896)和学习量(p = 0.171)上达成了一致,但住院医师认为OITE对其知识的评估价值不高,并且认为与项目主任相比,他们的个人成绩不太可能保密(p < 0.001)。住院医师担心自己无法通过美国骨科医师协会第一部分考试的OITE平均分数比项目主任的阈值高9.7个百分点(分别为42.3%和32.6%,p = 0.003)。两组都认为,为OITE投入专门的学习时间(p = 0.680)并取得好成绩(p = 0.099)很重要。关于最佳资源和备考策略,住院医师和项目主任在大多数(10种中的6种)学习方法的价值上倾向于达成一致。住院医师对练习题网站(平均排名分别为2.6和10种中的3.8;p < 0.001)和亚专科的正式轮转(分别为6.0和7.7,p < 0.001)的排名高于项目主任。相比之下,项目主任倾向于更看重他们项目的正式OITE备考计划(分别为4.1和5.3,p = 0.012)和阅读原始文献(分别为5.6和6.6,p = 0.012),而不是住院医师。
住院医师和项目主任在这个过程的许多关键组成部分上达成了一致;然而,在观点上存在一些关键差异。