United States Medical Licensing Examination

The United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) is a multi-part professional exam sponsored by the Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) and the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME). Physicians with an M.D. degree are required to pass this examination before being permitted to practice medicine in the United States; see below for requirements of physicians with a D.O. degree.[1]

Purpose

The USMLE assesses a physician's ability to apply knowledge, concepts, and principles, and to determine fundamental patient-centered skills that are important in health and disease and that constitute the basis of safe and effective patient care.[2] Examination committees composed of medical educators and clinicians from across the United States and its territories prepare the examination materials each year.

Overview

Students and graduates of U.S. or Canadian medical school programs accredited by either the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) or Committee on Accreditation of Canadian Medical Schools, leading to the Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree, or by the American Osteopathic Association (AOA), leading to the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.) degree, register for Step 1 and Step 2 of the USMLE with the NBME. Students and graduates of medical schools outside the United States or Canada register for Step 1 and Step 2 with the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG). Graduates of medical schools in and outside the United States and Canada register for Step 3 with the FSMB or with a medical licensing authority in the United States. Each of the three steps of the USMLE examination complements the other; no step stands alone in the assessment of readiness for medical licensure. The USMLE program recommends that for Step 3 eligibility, licensure authorities require the completion, or near completion, of at least one postgraduate training year in a program of graduate medical education accredited by the Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) or the American Osteopathic Association (AOA).

All three steps of the USMLE exam must be passed before a physician with an M.D. degree is eligible to apply for an unrestricted license to practice medicine in the United States. U.S. osteopathic medical school graduates are permitted to take the USMLE for medical licensure, which they can also obtain by passing the multi-part Comprehensive Osteopathic Medical Licensing Examination (COMLEX) professional exam. Students who have graduated from medical schools outside the US and Canada must pass all three steps of the USMLE to be licensed to practice in the US, regardless of the title of their degree. Overall pass rates for USMLE Step 1 test takers in 2013-2014 are: 95% for U.S. M.D. medical school graduates (97% in first-time takers), 94% for U.S. D.O. osteopathic medical school graduates (94% in first-time takers), and 72% for international medical school graduates (79% for first-time takers).[3] Overall USMLE Step 2 CK test taker pass rates in 2013-2014 are: 97% for U.S. M.D. medical school graduates (98% in first-time takers) and 96% for U.S. D.O. medical school graduates (96% in first-time takers).[4] Overall USMLE Step 2 CS test taker pass rates in 2013-2014 are: 97% for U.S. M.D. medical school graduates (98% in first-time takers) and 89% for U.S. D.O. medical school graduates (89% in first-time takers), though this figure may be somewhat misleading since there were 19,757 M.D. first-time test takers and 63 D.O. first-time test takers.[5] Overall pass rates for USMLE Step 3 test takers in 2013-2014 are: 96% for U.S. M.D. medical school graduates (97% in first-time takers), 92% for U.S. D.O. medical school graduates (96% in first-time takers), and 83% for international medical school graduates (87% in first-time takers). These statistics may be somewhat misleading since there were 19,086 M.D. first-time test takers for Step 3 and 23 D.O. first-time test takers. (In these statistics, "U.S. M.D. medical school graduates" includes graduates of Canadian M.D. programs.)[6]

Step 1

USMLE Step 1 assesses whether medical school students or graduates understand and can apply important concepts of the basic sciences to the practice of medicine. As of 2007, it covers the following subjects, in both systemic (general and individual anatomical characteristics) and procedural (functional, therapeutic, environmental, and abnormality) themes:

US medical students take Step 1 at the end of the Basic Sciences portion of the curriculum, usually after the second year of medical school. The two most renowned resources for Step 1 prep are the UWorld question bank and "First Aid for the USMLE Step 1." Step 1 is an eight-hour computer-based exam consisting of 308 multiple-choice questions (MCQs) divided into seven blocks each consisting of 44 questions. As of summer 2008, some questions include audio and video. Each block must be finished within an hour. The remaining hour is break time. An optional tutorial about how to use the computer program of the exam is offered at the beginning of the exam and takes 15 minutes. This time is deducted from the hour of allotted break time. A quality assurance survey is presented at the end, provided some of the original eight hours is left over.

Scores are reported as both a three-digit score and two-digit score. However, as of July 1, 2011 only the 3-digit score is reported on USMLE transcripts.[8] The two-digit score is not a percentile, as many test-takers have been known to erroneously report, but is instead an obsolete scale still used internally by some state medical licensing authorities. On January 1, 2014, the passing score was raised from 188 to 192.[9] The mean and standard deviation for first-time examinees from US and Canadian medical schools, as of July 2014, are 228 and 21, respectively, with most scores falling between 140 and 260 (worldwide, 260, rather than 270, is +2SD); this is up from 224 and 22, respectively, from December 2012.

The Step 1 score is frequently used in medical residency applications as a measure of a candidate's likelihood to succeed in that particular residency (and on that specialty's board exams), and it has been cited by residency program directors as their most important criterion in selecting graduating medical students for their residency program.[10] Average USMLE Step 1 scores for various residencies are available in Charting Outcomes in the Match. Averages for graduates of U.S. medical schools who matched into residency range from 213 for a Family Medicine to 249 for Plastic Surgery.[11]

If the student passes the exam, he or she may not repeat it to achieve a higher score, and any failed attempt is permanently recorded. This "one-time deal" situation is the reason the Step 1 is unanimously viewed as the most arduous and paramount examination a medical student will ever sit during his or her entire career. It has substantial bearing on the specialties and location a residency applicant is competitive for.

Step 2

USMLE Step 2 is designed to assess whether medical school students or graduates can apply medical knowledge, skills and understanding of clinical science essential for provision of patient care under supervision. US medical students typically take Step 2 during the fourth year of medical school. Step 2 is further divided into two separate exams:

Step 2 CK

USMLE Step 2 CK is designed to assess clinical knowledge through a traditional, multiple-choice examination. It is a 9-hour exam consisting of 8 blocks of approximately 44 questions each. One hour is given for each block of questions. The subjects included in this exam are clinical sciences like Medicine, Surgery, Pediatrics, Psychiatry and Obstetrics & Gynecology.

Step 2 CS

USMLE Step 2 CS is designed to assess clinical skills through simulated patient interactions, in which the examinee interacts with standardized patients portrayed by actors. Each examinee faces 12 Standardized Patients (SPs) and has 15 minutes to complete history taking and clinical examination for each patient, and then 10 more minutes to write a patient note describing the findings, initial differential diagnosis list and a list of initial tests. Administration of the Step 2-CS began in 2004. The examination is only offered in five cities across the country:

Before 2004, a similar exam, the Clinical Skills Assessment (CSA) was used to assess the clinical skills of foreign medical graduates.

Step 3

Main article: USMLE Step 3

USMLE Step 3 is the final exam in the USMLE series designed to assess whether a medical school graduate can apply medical knowledge and understanding of biomedical and clinical science essential for the unsupervised practice of medicine. Graduates of US medical schools typically take this exam at the end of the first year of residency. Foreign medical graduates can take Step 3 before starting residency in about ten U.S. states. Connecticut is frequently chosen for such purpose because it does not require simultaneous application for licensure, unlike New York. Starting from 2014 USMLE Step 3 will be divided into two separate parts.[12]

Format

The USMLE Step 1 first started out as a paper examination, converting to a computer based multiple choice examination. The test can be taken at Prometric test centers worldwide. However, the Step 2 CS and the Step 3 can only be taken in the USA. The software used to administer the test, the NBME FREDtm, was upgraded in 2008 to a new version, FREDtm V2. The implementation of this changeover continues.

Performance

Grade point average in undergraduate science courses and performance on the MCAT, particularly the biological sciences and physical sciences sections, are strong predictors of performance on the USMLE step 1 and step 2 exams, though it is unclear whether the verbal reasoning portion of the MCAT has any predictive value.[13] The selectivity of undergraduate institution is also a predictor of step 1 and step 2 performance, even when controlling for undergraduate GPA and MCAT score.[13]

Similar exams

In other countries

References

  1. United States Court of Appeals for this Third Circuit. 1605859. John Doe v. National Board of Medical Examiners, appellant, D.C. Civ. No. 99-cv-04532. AltLaw
  2. 2010 Bulletin of Information: USMLE. A publication of the FSMB and the NBME. 2009.
  3. "2013 Performance Data". Step 1 Administrations. Federation of Medical State Boards. 2014. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  4. "2013 Performance Data". Step 2 CK Administrations. Federation of Medical State Boards. 2014. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  5. "2013 Performance Data". Step 2 CS Administrations. Federation of Medical State Boards. 2014. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  6. "2013 Performance Data". United States Medical Licensing Examination. 2014. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  7. Archived February 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  8. "United States Medical Licensing Examination | Announcements". Usmle.org. Retrieved 2015-05-17.
  9. "United States Medical Licensing Examination | Announcements". Usmle.org. Retrieved 2015-05-17.
  10. Archived December 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  11. "The Match : National Resident Matching Program : Charting Outcomes in the Match : Characteristics of Applicants Who Matched to Their Preferred Specialty in the 2014 Main Residency Match" (PDF). Nrmp.org. Retrieved 2015-05-17.
  12. Ahmed, Burhan. "USMLE New Changes 2014: Step 3 Going To Be Divided Into Two Parts". Medicalopedia. Retrieved 2015-05-17.
  13. 1 2 Kleshinski, James; Sadik A. Khuder; Joseph I. Shapiro; Jeffrey P. Gold (7 November 2007). "Impact of preadmission variables on USMLE step 1 and step 2 performance" (PDF). Advances in Health Sciences Education (Springer) 14: 69–78. doi:10.1007/s10459-007-9087-x. Retrieved August 22, 2010.

External links

Wikibooks has a book on the topic of: USMLE Step One Review


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