Does performance on United States national board of medical examiners reflect student clinical experiences in United Arab Emirates? [Version 2]

Background: A number of medical schools around the world use the United States National Board of Medical Examiners Subject Examinations as a clerkship assessment of student performance, yet these exams were blueprinted against the United States national core clerkship curriculum which might not be t...

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Main Authors: Omran Bakoush, Ali Al Dhanhani, Saif Alshamsi, Janet Grant, John Norcini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE) 2019-04-01
Series:MedEdPublish
Subjects:
UAE
Online Access:https://www.mededpublish.org/Manuscripts/2186
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spelling doaj-0b12d77dd39d4700809b7c02102cd67d2020-11-25T01:40:36ZengAssociation for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE)MedEdPublish2312-79962019-04-0181Does performance on United States national board of medical examiners reflect student clinical experiences in United Arab Emirates? [Version 2]Omran Bakoush0Ali Al Dhanhani1Saif Alshamsi2Janet Grant3John Norcini4United Arab Emirates UniversityUnited Arab Emirates UniversityUnited Arab Emirates UniversityCentre for Medical Education in Context (CenMEDIC) and Department of Education in Medicine, Open UniversityFoundation for Advancement and International Medical Education and ResearchBackground: A number of medical schools around the world use the United States National Board of Medical Examiners Subject Examinations as a clerkship assessment of student performance, yet these exams were blueprinted against the United States national core clerkship curriculum which might not be the same as the local curricula to which they are applied in other parts of the world. In this study, we investigated the correlations between the internal medicine clinical experiences at United Arab Emirates University with student performance on the National Board of Medical Examiners subject of internal medicine (NBME). Methods: One hundred and seven junior clerkship students out of 145 (74%) who finished their Internal Medicine clerkship during academic years 2014-2015 and 2015-2016 participated in this study. The students' clinical experiences were measured by the clinical learning evaluation questionnaire (CLEQ) and by the logged number of meaningful patient contacts during their internal medicine clerkship. Results: Linear regression analysis showed no significant association between performance on the subject test and student clinical experiences measured by the CLEQ or the number of logged patients. NBME scores were weakly correlated with OSCEs scores (ɸ 0.20). Conclusions: The study findings raised uncertainties about the suitability of using NBME in the clerkship assessment program in the United Arab Emirates. https://www.mededpublish.org/Manuscripts/2186Clinical teachingLearning environmentInternal MedicineNational Board of Medical ExaminersStudent performanceUAE
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Omran Bakoush
Ali Al Dhanhani
Saif Alshamsi
Janet Grant
John Norcini
spellingShingle Omran Bakoush
Ali Al Dhanhani
Saif Alshamsi
Janet Grant
John Norcini
Does performance on United States national board of medical examiners reflect student clinical experiences in United Arab Emirates? [Version 2]
MedEdPublish
Clinical teaching
Learning environment
Internal Medicine
National Board of Medical Examiners
Student performance
UAE
author_facet Omran Bakoush
Ali Al Dhanhani
Saif Alshamsi
Janet Grant
John Norcini
author_sort Omran Bakoush
title Does performance on United States national board of medical examiners reflect student clinical experiences in United Arab Emirates? [Version 2]
title_short Does performance on United States national board of medical examiners reflect student clinical experiences in United Arab Emirates? [Version 2]
title_full Does performance on United States national board of medical examiners reflect student clinical experiences in United Arab Emirates? [Version 2]
title_fullStr Does performance on United States national board of medical examiners reflect student clinical experiences in United Arab Emirates? [Version 2]
title_full_unstemmed Does performance on United States national board of medical examiners reflect student clinical experiences in United Arab Emirates? [Version 2]
title_sort does performance on united states national board of medical examiners reflect student clinical experiences in united arab emirates? [version 2]
publisher Association for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE)
series MedEdPublish
issn 2312-7996
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Background: A number of medical schools around the world use the United States National Board of Medical Examiners Subject Examinations as a clerkship assessment of student performance, yet these exams were blueprinted against the United States national core clerkship curriculum which might not be the same as the local curricula to which they are applied in other parts of the world. In this study, we investigated the correlations between the internal medicine clinical experiences at United Arab Emirates University with student performance on the National Board of Medical Examiners subject of internal medicine (NBME). Methods: One hundred and seven junior clerkship students out of 145 (74%) who finished their Internal Medicine clerkship during academic years 2014-2015 and 2015-2016 participated in this study. The students' clinical experiences were measured by the clinical learning evaluation questionnaire (CLEQ) and by the logged number of meaningful patient contacts during their internal medicine clerkship. Results: Linear regression analysis showed no significant association between performance on the subject test and student clinical experiences measured by the CLEQ or the number of logged patients. NBME scores were weakly correlated with OSCEs scores (ɸ 0.20). Conclusions: The study findings raised uncertainties about the suitability of using NBME in the clerkship assessment program in the United Arab Emirates.
topic Clinical teaching
Learning environment
Internal Medicine
National Board of Medical Examiners
Student performance
UAE
url https://www.mededpublish.org/Manuscripts/2186
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