Predicting success: A comparative analysis of student performance on the surgical clerkship and the NBME surgery subject exam

Background: The National Board of Medical Examiners surgery shelf is a well-established terminal measure of student medical knowledge. No study has explored the correlation between intraclerkship quizzes and shelf exam performance. Methods: Weekly quiz and National Board of Medical Examiners scores...

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Main Authors: Jamil Jaber, Natasha Keric, Paul Kang, Ara J Feinstein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-10-01
Series:Surgery Open Science
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589845019300235
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spelling doaj-be368fb6e6b54dcdafed84528ba2ab932020-11-25T03:00:38ZengElsevierSurgery Open Science2589-84502019-10-01128689Predicting success: A comparative analysis of student performance on the surgical clerkship and the NBME surgery subject examJamil Jaber0Natasha Keric1Paul Kang2Ara J Feinstein3Corresponding author at: University of Arizona, College of Medicine Phoenix, 550 E Van Buren St, Phoenix, AZ 85004, USA.; University of Arizona College of Medicine PhoenixUniversity of Arizona College of Medicine PhoenixUniversity of Arizona College of Medicine PhoenixUniversity of Arizona College of Medicine PhoenixBackground: The National Board of Medical Examiners surgery shelf is a well-established terminal measure of student medical knowledge. No study has explored the correlation between intraclerkship quizzes and shelf exam performance. Methods: Weekly quiz and National Board of Medical Examiners scores were collected from 156 third-year students who participated in a 12-week surgical clerkship from 2015 to 2017. Kruskal-Wallis, Wilcoxon rank sum, and linear regression analysis was completed. Results: Trauma/Burns, Esophagus/Anorectal, and Wound/Intensive Care Unit quiz content corresponded with increased National Board of Medical Examiners performance with β-coefficients of 1.57 (P < .001), 1.42 (P < .001), 1.38 (P < .001), respectively. Wound/Intensive Care Unit and Cardio/Vascular content corresponded with decreased likelihood of scoring <70 points on the National Board of Medical Examiners (OR: 0.75 (P = .03), and 0.68 (P = .02)). Aggregate quiz scores stratified by academic block were 67 (IQR 64–69.5), 77 (IQR 74.5–80), 76.5 (IQR of 67–89.5), 83 (IQR of 76–85) corresponding to academic blocks 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively (P < .001). Conclusion: Modeling National Board of Medical Examiners outcomes as a function of weekly quizzes taken during a 12-week surgery clerkship is a viable concept.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589845019300235
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jamil Jaber
Natasha Keric
Paul Kang
Ara J Feinstein
spellingShingle Jamil Jaber
Natasha Keric
Paul Kang
Ara J Feinstein
Predicting success: A comparative analysis of student performance on the surgical clerkship and the NBME surgery subject exam
Surgery Open Science
author_facet Jamil Jaber
Natasha Keric
Paul Kang
Ara J Feinstein
author_sort Jamil Jaber
title Predicting success: A comparative analysis of student performance on the surgical clerkship and the NBME surgery subject exam
title_short Predicting success: A comparative analysis of student performance on the surgical clerkship and the NBME surgery subject exam
title_full Predicting success: A comparative analysis of student performance on the surgical clerkship and the NBME surgery subject exam
title_fullStr Predicting success: A comparative analysis of student performance on the surgical clerkship and the NBME surgery subject exam
title_full_unstemmed Predicting success: A comparative analysis of student performance on the surgical clerkship and the NBME surgery subject exam
title_sort predicting success: a comparative analysis of student performance on the surgical clerkship and the nbme surgery subject exam
publisher Elsevier
series Surgery Open Science
issn 2589-8450
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Background: The National Board of Medical Examiners surgery shelf is a well-established terminal measure of student medical knowledge. No study has explored the correlation between intraclerkship quizzes and shelf exam performance. Methods: Weekly quiz and National Board of Medical Examiners scores were collected from 156 third-year students who participated in a 12-week surgical clerkship from 2015 to 2017. Kruskal-Wallis, Wilcoxon rank sum, and linear regression analysis was completed. Results: Trauma/Burns, Esophagus/Anorectal, and Wound/Intensive Care Unit quiz content corresponded with increased National Board of Medical Examiners performance with β-coefficients of 1.57 (P < .001), 1.42 (P < .001), 1.38 (P < .001), respectively. Wound/Intensive Care Unit and Cardio/Vascular content corresponded with decreased likelihood of scoring <70 points on the National Board of Medical Examiners (OR: 0.75 (P = .03), and 0.68 (P = .02)). Aggregate quiz scores stratified by academic block were 67 (IQR 64–69.5), 77 (IQR 74.5–80), 76.5 (IQR of 67–89.5), 83 (IQR of 76–85) corresponding to academic blocks 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively (P < .001). Conclusion: Modeling National Board of Medical Examiners outcomes as a function of weekly quizzes taken during a 12-week surgery clerkship is a viable concept.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589845019300235
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