Welcome! Please Browse around, there are hidden gems in this site.

Showing posts with label Clinicals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clinicals. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Step 2 CS - Failed/No Pass - How to study/What to do - help USMLE Clinical Skills 2013

Many more students are not passing the USMLE Clinical Skills exam, as the ECFMG have recently in July 2013, increased the passing standards, targetting especially Foreign Medical Graduates. As someone who has witnessed first hand a repeated experience with this exam, I can provide a unique view of how to deal with this test.
  • First and foremost, realize that US Grads have an advantage since a lot of programs provide patient actor feedback since year 1 of medical school! So they are 2 years ahead of you if your first clinical experience is in 3rd year. If your school has lacked this type of training, it would be wise of you to bone up on some basics. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RckmVLdHKtk
  • You MUST read the USMLE Step 2 CS official handbook http://www.usmle.org/step-2-cs/  and well, read the whole thing, but more specifically, read two very important sections towards the back of the pdf. Here's the 2013 Pdf link: http://www.usmle.org/pdfs/step-2-cs/cs-info-manual.pdf
  • 1) Read the grading requirements for the ICE, CIS, and SEP English Proficiency portions
  • 2) read the Patient Note instructions/examples. ***(Pages 12, and pages 17-21)***
  • Understanding the grading criteria is really the most important advice I can offer. This is a 3 part exam, and if you fail ANY ONE part of it, you DO NO PASS the whole thing. Remember this fact througout your practice/studying for it. You must be adequate in all three areas, in order to pass this exam. For example, focusing on getting a perfect patient history, while neglecting patient care/empathy (the CIS) requirements will fail you. Taking a half thought out history, and writing just an OK note while making the patient feel relatively comfortable (although this sounds like you're not using the best clinical work ethic), WILL PASS you.  This is NOT the image you want to see.
    btw you are also given a visual "xxxxxxx" score breakdown in the traditional NBME score reporting style, but it offers NO specific feedback. This is as much feedback as you get.  
  • This is an expensive exam, about $1400, plus hotel fees, plus transportation, plus flights... Taking this exam twice is twice as expensive. It might be a deal breaker for some of you!
  • For some reason, and this may not turn out to be true, but the Philidelphia testing center has seen more failures according to forum posts and word of mouth. This was the original, and only, Step 2 CS testing center and whether it recieves more strict patient actors, requirements, or more highly trained US Grads, or if its just a fluke, I would advoid this testing center if possible. If not, just don't let this hoopla cloud your judgement. As much wiggle room as there is in the format of this exam, it really is pretty standardized, and I can attest to that having taken the exam months apart at different centers. My experience was essentially the same. 
  • Look up the testing periods and the respective Score Reporting periods to make sure you have your score in time for interviews. For me, I took first in April, and by that time all slots are booked until November. There are mailing lists on the OASIS website that can email you when spots are freed up by someone who cancells their spot. You must be in good practice, and  ready to go at the drop of a hat and ready to book a last minute flight as well, in case you have to retake. I retook in Late August, and recieved my score in October in time for interviews.
  • This brings up a big point, take the exam as early as you are ready to do it. Because, if you don't end up passing, you will need to A) re-register, B) re-pay for the exam, and C) re-schedule the exam during a time which may be incredibly booked. 
  • PS, taking an EMERGENCY MEDICINE or outpatient FAMILY PRACTICE elective where you are taking patient histories solo, you should really do this before taking your exam. Taking OBGYN and PEDS also are hugely helpful since you will definately get a case from one or both these specialties. 
  • Look at the programs you are applying to for residency. Many do not care if youve taken CS or not, so why risk it? Many of them want you to pass the exam before you start on day 1 of your residency. You can STILL MATCH!! 
  • Don't bother with a score re-check, especially if you did not pass the CIS portion. There is no reviewing of your performance, only re-tallying the check boxes in case someone miss counted, which is highly highly unlikely. 
***UPDATE***

  • If you took ANY USMLE Exam late, and you finally recieve your score/results, and it is AFTER you have already submitted your ERAS Applications... you must go back to eras and to the Transcript section and CLICK RE-SUBMIT!!! Otherwise your new scores will not be included in your application, this applies to Step 2 CK AND CS. 
If you do not pass the exam, there will be limited information online, you can scour the internet full of super-negative reports from (mostly) FMG/IMG's who didnt pass for whatever reasons, and this will scare you. You will get little sympathy from the ECFMG or the USMLE and you may feel abandoned. You will feel miserable, full of self-doubt and contempt for the ECFMG and contemplate giving up medicine maybe, you might feel inadequate, and finally, ISOLATED. You might be embarrassed to mention this fact to anyone, especially your colleages in fear of being looked at as unfit to practice medicine. 

Well DON'T. I have a better way to look at it. 
  • First and foremost, stop using the word FAIL. From now on, you will use the words "NOT PASS". You must find positivity in this experience and prevail, both for your future career, your mental health, and for your Interviews!! You must explain your experience in a positive light eventually to someone who can see your transcript. So wipe all that negativity out of your head and accept it. You did not fail, You simply did not pass, this time.
  • Next, you need to do some self-evaluation. What portion of the exam was weak? Go back and review the grading criteria for that section, and try to remember what your testing performance lacked. Be objective, but not super critical of yourself. You are capable, and have the opportunity to improve yourself! If you had barely passed with a borderline score, you wouldn't have taken this time to better your bedside manner and clinical skills!
  • Third, try to find out if anyone else in your situation didn't pass, and try to have a discussion with them. Work out your frusterations, and concerns, and work together to persevere. You might not want to practice with this person, as they won't be a good partner, no offense to them, but you need someone who knows how to pass. Wish them luck in their journey in your struggle. 
  • Practice with a stranger. Online dating is actually a pretty awesome avenue here... Find someone who doesn't know you, who is coming ready to judge you in their first impression of you. Do a case with them! Get honest feedback! This will be SUPER valuable for you, and maybe you'll find love too. Or just find a friend who's not in the medical field. 
  • Practice writing the note out in the format that is described in the official handbook. Focused note. No findings that don't entertain any of your differential diagnosis. Only pertinent information. You are trying to prove to another physician that you were thinking 3 differentials, and that you were trying to rule them in or out with your questioning and exam. Thats it. No fluff or excess Rewview of systems or exam findings that have nothing to do with that just because you were trying to look like you do a thorough job. You want your note to tell a story titled, "what were you thinking was going on?" ... not "I decided to do everything under the sun and look really thorough and maybe if I do that, ill hit some pertininent postitives and negatives that I can use". You want your grading MD to say in his/her head "ah... i see why they did that, and ah I see why they included that, they must have been thinking about ____ diagnosis". 
  • In terms of your english skills, just check in with the patient! That's one of the criteria in the grading in the official handbook anyway, which you should be doing even if you have perfect english. BUT, if you have limited english skills, all you need to do is constantly ask "Do you understand what I mean?" and if they say no... then explain a different way until they do! That's good medicine! Who cares if you don't have a textbook vocabulary. If the patient understands you, thats all that matters.
  • Finally, Don't take this exam as a measure of your ability to be a doctor. IT IS NOT. It is a hoop you must jump through to pass to the next stage. No one works under the stress of getting everything correct the first time, without time to correct any mistakes. In Medicine there ARE second chances, there are colleagues with which you can discuss clinical gestalt and judgement, AND you have more than 20 minutes to evaluate and document a patient case and explain to the patient whats going on with them. If doctors worked at the pace of the Step 2 CS exam, we would have the most effieient doctors in the world! In the real world, ideally it would be great to work like this, but its just not this way. I think you know this is true already. Remember, it is just an exam, to see how you perform under stress. 
I don't know what else to say at this point. 

Overall, the whole process, even just taking it one time, is stressful enough. Prepare yourself by knowing the format of the exam, the grading, and practice with someone who can evaluate you using the official step 2 CS grading criteria. Make it realistic, and do the same thing with your actual patients in your clinical clerkships and see how they react to you. 

I wish you all the best of luck and that you may prosper with your careers. 

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

USMLE Step 2 CK "free 150" Questions - 2013 +USMLERx

Like for Step 1, Step 2 CK has a handbook, which you should be aware about, and it contains a 3 block - 131 question exam at the end with answers. Some people call this the "Free 150", i think, unless there is another exam I am unaware about. But this exam is OFFICIALLY released by the USMLE on their website and you shouldn't neglect it.

Here you go!
And great luck!
http://www.usmle.org/pdfs/step-2-ck/2012--13_FINAL_S2_GSI.pdf

If this link doesn't work, try going and clicking the "handbook"
in the right margin HERE.
http://www.usmle.org/step-2-ck/
Same thing. Cheers!

Also!  USMLE Rx offers a 20 question Free trial of their question bank (and so do others... but its a nice little review quiz for Step 2CK material... here is the link:

http://m.qmax.usmle-rx.com/user/testdrive.aspx?step=2


Saturday, June 1, 2013

Step 2 Study Prep - Brian Jenkins Authors Step Up - DIT - New Book! April 2013

For those who criticized DIT for Step 2 in the past, Brian Jenkins, the brain behind the DIT USMLE Review Courses has co-authored the newest version of the Step up to Step 2 book, which is the book the review course follows. Just like how DIT step 1 followed First aid... its nice to have a resource to follow allong with, otherwise it just doesn't give you full learning potential.

I haven't gotten a chance to review this new book in person yet, but I will be headed over to the library today to check it out. Will add criticisms accordingly.

Here has been my assessments in the past about the different books available for Step 2, there are a lot of them and all slightly different.
http://www.doctormuggle.blogspot.com/2012/12/first-aid-2013-basic-science-rotations.html

A lot of people are using the Step up to Step 2 book, so hopefully it Steps up to its own expectations. ha!
in the meantime... here it is!

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

How to Prepare for Step 2 CK -... update coming later

so far, I am in the process of shelling out >$800 for the registration and determining the best resources to use during clerkships so that I am familiar with 1 book full of my notes come study time. I don't have much time to dedicate outside of work to study, and it would be nice to do this efficiently.

So far, there are some EXCELLENT reviews on this forum, of a guy who got 260's, and another who got 206. They describe very much in detail how they studied and what they studied, and it really shows the two extremes that you can take in order to pass Step 2.

More to come later... for now... read these. Goodluck!

http://www.aippg.net/forum/f26/my-step-2-ck-104325/

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Clinical Years Study Step 2 CK/CS and Pocket Books Y3 - Rotations

Start with Scrubs and White Coats:
http://www.scrubsandbeyond.com/Student-Scrubs-Labs-and-Clinical-Coats.html
adding more sources later...
Also, check your local Google searches for Medical Uniforms Stores and go try it on in person. I found my first experience interesting since there are so many types of brands of scrubs and white coats and styles. If you want to shop around.

For your White-Coat:
FOLDABLE POCKET CLIPBOARDS













Retractable Badge Clip - really nice to have
  
Pocket Books and Books to Master the STEP 2


NEW! First Aid 2013 - Basic Science, Rotations, Step 1 + 2 - Resource 2013

STEP 1:
The new FA Step 1 book is out! I'm not sure how different this version will be compared to the 2012 version, as the 2012 edition had many differences with the previous ones, including color. Overall, most of these dating back to 2009 are more or less identical, but they do make some changes that reflect the updates to the USMLE content, year to year. With the recent changes to the percentage of clinical-natured of the questions and the updates to the CS exam format emphasizing more clinical understanding, it would be wise to attain a newer version, as these changes have been implementing over the last couple years. Good luck!

STEP 2 CK and CS:
There is so much discussion about what book is the best resource. There are so many choices as well. Now. I have read several forumn, book reviews, etc and I still have problems, as most of these books are constantly updating to new editions.

This is what I have understood so far. In terms of being most comprehensive First Aid Step 2 CK (8th) > Step Up to Medicine (3rd) > Master the Boards (2nd). So, really it depends on what one book you want to spend time taking notes in and reading. Keep in mind for Kaplan videos, again they seem to be too comprehensive and time consuming assuming you really learned nothing during clinicals and step 1, and DIT seems to be less helpful compared to Step 1 course. This may be due to the fact it follows Step up to USMLE Step 2 book instead of the comprehensive book, and people have complained over and over about this, and thus abandoned Step 2 DIT course. However, there is a new edition of this book being released in April 2013, which may Change the way people feel about this resource. Finally, First Aid Boards and Wards (5th), is a pocket book, that really captures what you need to know about each specialty, from the perspective of someone in a different specialty. They tried to put surgery in terms of an internist, and pediatrics in terms for a surgeon. So it really helps a breadth of individuals whatever your strengths are and should help you in the Shelf exams and pimping, and Step 2.



From my experience, the Step Up to Medicine (3rd) is the best complete resource so far. Although, I dont think it covers surgery or obgyn in quite the detail it deserves for your core rotations, but it covers the high yield information for the Step 2 CK, as those topics aren't quite as massive sections as is Pediatrics and Internal Medicine. Others seem to agree.


****For other Clinical Pocket books, resources, clipboards, and helpful items for Clerkships in 3rd and 4th year, check out this article: http://doctormuggle.blogspot.com/2012/07/test.html 

*****For Tablets that will fit in your lab coat, check out this article:
http://doctormuggle.blogspot.com/2012/11/update-for-clinical-medical-student-3.html





Sunday, November 25, 2012

Update for Clinical Medical Student 3 - White Coat Tablet - Ipad Mini, Nexus 7, Kindle Fire

Having a tablet that fits in your lab coat... Priceless.

Having charge and reception on your phone.... priceless.
Having a lightweight library of review books, question books, and medical texts, as well as Uptodate, Medscape, and netters anatomy in your pocket... More than priceless.

I suggest you look into the Nexus 7, Ipad Mini, Amazon Kindle Fire HD.

These are your mainstay products that fit in your pocket, are powerful, fast, longlasting battery life, and support a lot of the apps youll need and want. Nowadays, all the apps like Prognosis and Medscape and Casefiles are universal for all. The Ipad is priced a little higher... of course, but really the difference is the iOS vs Android vs Amazon Google Store. The Nexus 7 on Android is the cheapest and really will be the envy of your clinical group, if you need something on a budget, which most of us are. 


Having a smart phone or tablet is priceless... you may want to consider a phone or tablet.  I love having an iphone to look up abbreviations, diseases, surgical procedures, anatomy, etc... during rounds and lectures... but also, It would be nice to have a "dumb"-phone with a superior battery life and cell reception because hospitals are notorious for having terrible dead spots. And when someones trying to get ahold of you for whatever reason, it can be quite frustrating, assuming you dont have a pager, or your pager battery dies, which happens.

Goodluck!

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Find Residency Program Details Before Scheduling 4th Year Elective Rotations

This FREIDA section of the AMA website allows you to search for residency programs by state or by specialty in the USA. It tells you many many details including what benefits you get (meal plan, free parking, on site child services, salary, how many years, how many spots, minimum USMLE score needed to apply, when application dates are, who the program director is and contact information, what hours you work, how many days off, how many hours on a beeper, how you are evaluated,  etc etc etc)

SO many important details about your potential future. Check it out.

https://freida.ama-assn.org/Freida/user/viewProgramSearch.do

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

2012/2013 Residency Match Results - SGU - IMG/FMG - Specialty

Have you looked at the NRMP (National Residency Match Program) 2012 Match Results?
**update, now The 2013 Results ARE POSTED.

The number of applicants have increased more than the number of spots added to the match. Make sure you are informed so you don't end up not matching. 



  • Look at the information overall 
  • by Specialty you are interested in
  • by US, DO, FMG, and IMG statistics over the last 4 years in this report. Also divides data by state.
  • Look at detailed data within each specialty
  • Which programs had left over spots
  • Which specialties favored US FMG or Int FMGs
  • What Board scores almost never got interviews or almost always got interviews


Don't rely on Dr. John Madden's outdated seminars from 2008. You should get the most recent statistics!

Also!! There is a list in the end of this report that:
  • shows ALL the residency programs by state
  • which hospitals they are in
  • how many spots are available in each specialty offered
SO LOOK! ---> http://www.nrmp.org/data/index.html


You can compare and utilize the Match Reports for SGU students over the last 4 years also to gain a good understanding of how things turn out for us FMG/IMG students.

  • who matched
  • where they matched
  • Does not tell who got pre-lim spots vs categorical spots, so you can just compare the PGY-1 spots to the number of PGY-2 spots in the same specialty. It takes a little work but this information is available.

Here is the SGU Match Results page:

http://www.sgu.edu/alumni/student-profile-alumni-residency-appointments.html

GOODLUCK!

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Medical Books Shipping cheap for Students with Amazon Prime!

If you order your books on amazon, you surely pay a lot in shipping.
Also, sometimes it takes days and days to receive your items, correct?
And you're a student with a .edu email account?
Perfect.

You can get a free year of FREE 2 day shipping with amazonstudent. Its amazon prime free for a year.

The catch? They start charging you $80/year after 12 months. So, just remember to cancel it before that time comes, I've done it and cancelling is easy as a click of a couple buttons. just goto this website and sign up. 

http://www.amazon.com/gp/student/signup/info
 
Annnnd, you're done. Enjoy!

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

2012 Medical Report - Medscape - Physician Lifestyles, Happiness, and Salary - By Specialty

These two recent studies show an incredible amount of insight into the different specialties and how physicians practice medicine in the USA. Happiness, Job Satisfaction, Lifestyle, Hours Worked per week, # of Patients Seen, Time Spent per Patient, Vacation Time, Vacation destinations, Salary, Marraige status, Exercise, ETOH, and Smoking habits, and more are all explored not only across different specialties, but also across physicians within specific specialties. Feel free to explore all the information on these two reports from Medscape.

*Click the Title to view report*


--> 2012 MEDSCAPE LIFESTYLE REPORT












--> 2012 MEDSCAPE COMPENSATION REPORT


Friday, October 21, 2011

OSPE 1 + 2 - SGU - Grades.. What's Important About Them?

Just a reminder about the big picture here before you neglect to study for these Exams.

These two tests (one in term 1 and the second one in term 2), make up a combined 11% of your total grade in CPD in 4th term Clinical skills. This is a minimal class in terms of credits. However, it does mean the difference between an A and a B. In the long run, a letter grade here will not affect your total GPA much at all.

And, back to the big picture, when talking about what schools look for to place you in residencies (which really is your goal), is not your basic science GPA.CHECK OUT THE PICTURE BELOW... #12... "Preclinical GPA". It is the GPA from the Clinical years 3 and 4, as well as your STEP 1 and 2 Scores mainly that matter. After that, there are things like class rank, publications, etc (check out the clinical advisory website for the list) http://www.sguocg.net/yal1ng13nnhahs4sd8ruYYGsmN/index.html,
** another great resource is the NBME website. (really, dont worry about this until your third year, but if you want to be stubborn and look it up anyway, there are surveys per each specialty and which criteria program directors from each specialty said they found most important when selecting people for residency spots). ** IN GENERAL, this picture holds true across the board.


Take it how you want it. Well, anyway. How do you study for the OSPE?

There ARE files out there that cover the high yield topics and information. I can't possibly list them here it happened all so fast, but ask around and you shall receive seems to be the rule. Other than that, you should go through all of your notes from day one until current, and review everything quickly. And mainly the high points, remember its only a few questions. Its daunting, but in the long run its not too important, however getting an A in CPD in 5th term is quite easy and it would be a shame to miss out on it. Oh well, hope this was helpful. Maybe use this opportunity to clean up a lot of the clutter and extra paperwork you may never look at ever again. Afterall, you need to organize this stuff Sometime, you'll need it for the BSCE I and BSCE II exams, the NBME full length exam in term 5, and of course, when you prepare for Step 1, 2, 3.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Medscape eMedicine

This website has everything you want to know about a disease. Causes, risk factors, diagnostic investigations, Symptoms, Complications, etc etc etc. Definitely bookmark this and have it for your Clinical Rotations. Looking up medication names and dosages are essential!


Also, you can get the app for free on your Ipod/Iphone/Ipad/Android/Blackberry:

http://www.medscape.com/public/mobileapp

It's great, I once looked up an analgesic I almost bought from a Pharmacist in Africa, and it turned out I was buying an antibiotic, so I gave it back.  

It also will give you all the pharmacokinetics of drugs, drug-drug interactions, and new updates and articles + more. Highly recommended for anyone in the medical field.

Remember to be connected to Wifi at first, there are a lot of updates to load
but after that, its very fast and doesn't need to be connected to the internet. 

Monday, March 21, 2011

Pick a Specialty Quiz

There's A website that usually you need membership to use, which is a questionaire to help you figure out which specialty is right for you.

I'm not sure how accurate it is, but it's kind of fun to see if you have no idea. Check it out.

http://medpathway.wustl.edu/main_menu.htm