Department of Family and Community Medicine, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, GA.
Department of Family Medicine, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
Fam Med. 2024 Sep;56(8):505-508. doi: 10.22454/FamMed.2024.806898. Epub 2024 Jul 1.
Reports on the effects of changing the United States Medical Licensing Exam (USMLE) Step 1 examination scoring to pass/fail are evolving in the medical literature. This Council of Academic Family Medicine Educational Research Alliance family medicine clerkship directors' study seeks to describe family medicine clerkship directors' perceptions on the impact of incorporation of Step 1 pass/fail score reporting on students' family medicine clerkship performance.
Ninety-six clerkship directors responded (56.8% response rate). After exclusion of Canadian schools, we analyzed 88 clerkship directors' responses from US schools. We used descriptive statistics for demographics and responses to survey questions. We used ꭓ2 analysis to determine statistically significant associations between survey items.
Clerkship directors did not observe changes in students' overall clinical performance after Step 1 pass/fail scoring (60.8%). Fifty percent of clerkship directors reported changes in Step 1 timing recommendations in the past 3 years. Reasons included curriculum redesign (30.5%), COVID (4.5%), change in Step 1 to pass/fail (11.0%), and other reasons (3.7%). Forty-five percent of these clerkship directors did not observe a change in students' clinical medical knowledge after Step 1 went to pass/fail. Eighty-four percent of these clerkship directors did not compare student performance on clerkship standardized exams before and after Step 1 score changes. We found no significant relationship between Step 1 timing and student performance.
This study represents an early description of family medicine clerkship directors' perceived observations of the impact of Step 1 scoring changes on student performance. Continued investigation of the effects of USMLE Step 1 pass/fail scoring should occur.
有关美国医师执照考试(USMLE)第 1 步考试成绩改为通过/不通过的影响的报告在医学文献中不断出现。该家庭医学教育研究联盟理事会的家庭医学实习主任研究旨在描述家庭医学实习主任对将第 1 步通过/不通过分数报告纳入学生家庭医学实习成绩的影响的看法。
96 名实习主任做出了回应(回应率为 56.8%)。排除加拿大学校后,我们分析了来自美国学校的 88 名实习主任的回应。我们使用描述性统计数据来描述人口统计学和对调查问题的回应。我们使用ꭓ2分析来确定调查项目之间的统计学显著关联。
实习主任在第 1 步通过/不通过评分后没有观察到学生整体临床表现的变化(60.8%)。50%的实习主任报告在过去 3 年中改变了第 1 步的推荐时间。原因包括课程重新设计(30.5%)、COVID(4.5%)、第 1 步改为通过/不通过(11.0%)和其他原因(3.7%)。这些实习主任中的 45%没有观察到学生在第 1 步变为通过/不通过后临床医学知识的变化。这些实习主任中的 84%没有比较学生在第 1 步分数变化前后在实习标准化考试中的表现。我们没有发现第 1 步时间与学生表现之间的显著关系。
这项研究代表了家庭医学实习主任对第 1 步评分变化对学生表现影响的早期看法。应该继续对 USMLE 第 1 步通过/不通过评分的影响进行调查。