Walter Lauren A, Khoury Charles A, DeLaney Matthew C, Thompson Maxwell A, Rushing Courtney, Edwards Andrew R
Department of Emergency Medicine University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham Alabama USA.
AEM Educ Train. 2021 Jul 1;5(3):e10636. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10636. eCollection 2021 Jul.
Performance on the annual in-training examination (ITE) for emergency medicine (EM) residents has been shown to correlate with performance on the American Board of Emergency Medicine (ABEM) qualifying examination. As such, significant planning is often committed to ITE preparation, from an individual resident and a residency program perspective. Online specialty-specific question banks (QBanks) represent a popular medium for ITE preparation; however, the impact of QBanks on ITE performance is unclear. We sought to assess the impact of QBank participation on EM resident ITE performance.
ITE and QBank performance results were collated over 2 academic years, 2019 and 2020, from a 3-year EM residency program. The QBank was provided as a self-study option in 2019 and incorporated as a mandatory component of the curriculum in 2020. ITE raw scores and percentile rank for training level scores were compared with performance on the QBank, including QBank average performance score as well as number of QBank questions completed. The Pearson correlation coefficient was used to measure association between ITE performance and QBank correlates. Additional descriptive demographics, to include gender, PGY level, and USMLE step 1 and 2 scores were also considered.
Sixty-two sets (30 residents in 2019, 32 residents in 2020) of ITE performance data and QBank correlates were included. Overall, raw ITE scores and number of QBank questions completed were found to have a significant, positive correlation, ((60) = 0.34, p < 0.05); correlation was stronger for 2019 ([28] = 0.39, p < 0.05) compared to 2020 ([30] =0.25, p = 0.16). Overall, ITE percentile rank for training level scores were also found to have a significant, positive correlation with number of QBank questions completed ((60) = 0.35, p < 0.05); correlation was again stronger for 2019 (r(28) = 0.42, p < 0.05) compared to 2020 (r(30) = 0.29, p = 0.12). Finally, ITE percentile rank for training level correlated positively with QBank average performance (as a percentage), albeit weakly, and was not found to be significant overall ([60] = 0.20, p = 0.16); in this instance, 2019 did not show a correlation ([28] =0.12, p = 0.54); however, 2020 did ([30] =0.55, p < 0.05). Academic year 2020 raw ITE scores also demonstrated a significant correlation with QBank average performance ([30] = 0.66, p < 0.0001) while 2019 did not ([28] = 0.08, p = 0.68).
Participation and engagement in a QBank are associated with improved EM resident performance on the ABEM ITE. Utilization of a QBank may be an effective mode of ITE preparation for EM residents.
急诊医学(EM)住院医师年度在职考试(ITE)的成绩已被证明与美国急诊医学委员会(ABEM)资格考试的成绩相关。因此,从住院医师个人和住院医师培训项目的角度来看,通常会投入大量精力进行ITE备考。在线专业题库(QBanks)是ITE备考的一种流行方式;然而,题库对ITE成绩的影响尚不清楚。我们试图评估参与题库对EM住院医师ITE成绩的影响。
整理了2019年和2020年两个学年、一个为期三年的EM住院医师培训项目的ITE和题库成绩结果。2019年,题库作为一种自学选项提供,2020年则纳入课程的必修部分。将ITE原始分数和培训水平分数的百分位排名与题库成绩进行比较,包括题库平均成绩以及完成的题库题目数量。使用Pearson相关系数来衡量ITE成绩与题库相关因素之间的关联。还考虑了其他描述性人口统计学因素,包括性别、住院医师培训年数以及美国医师执照考试第一步和第二步的成绩。
纳入了62组(2019年30名住院医师,2020年32名住院医师)ITE成绩数据和题库相关因素。总体而言,发现ITE原始分数与完成的题库题目数量之间存在显著的正相关,(r(60) = 0.34,p < 0.05);与2020年(r(30) = 0.25,p = 0.16)相比,2019年的相关性更强(r(