National ABSITE Preparation Practices: A Survey of General Surgery Residency Program Directors

•The most common resources for ABSITE preparation are SCORE and Q-banks.•A year-long curriculum for ABSITE preparation correlates with improved scores.•Many program directors report ABSITE scores are a low priority for their program. The American Board of Surgery In-Training Examination (ABSITE) was...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of surgical education 2024-01, Vol.81 (1), p.56-63
Hauptverfasser: Caldwell, Katharine E., Clanahan, Julie M., Klingensmith, Mary E., Wise, Paul E., Awad, Michael M., Dickinson, Karen J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The most common resources for ABSITE preparation are SCORE and Q-banks.•A year-long curriculum for ABSITE preparation correlates with improved scores.•Many program directors report ABSITE scores are a low priority for their program. The American Board of Surgery In-Training Examination (ABSITE) was designed as a low-stakes, medical knowledge examination for US general surgery residency programs. However, in practice, this exam has been utilized for higher stakes purposes, such as resident promotion or remediation, and fellowship selection. Several studies have demonstrated the efficacy of ABSITE preparation resources, but best practices for ABSITE preparation and national preparatory habits are currently unknown. The aim of this work was to determine current residency programs’ strategies for ABSITE preparation. We distributed an electronic survey to program directors or program coordinators of US general surgery programs asking them to anonymously report program ABSITE educational practices and ABSITE scores. We analyzed the proportion of responses using descriptive statistics and compared the effect of various strategies using the Mann-Whitney testing for nonparametric data. An average ABSITE percentile score was calculated for each residency based on program self-reported scores. Association of Program Directors (APDS) Listserv General surgery residency programs participating at the time of distribution (278). Response rate was 24% (66/278); 41 programs (62.1%) identified as university-affiliated, and 25 (37.9%) were community-based. Median intern class size was 8 (range: 3-14), including preliminary interns. Average ABSITE percentile score was 52.8% (range 36.9%-67.6%). There were no significant differences in ABSITE scores based on affiliation or program size. Educational resources utilized for ABSITE preparation included SCORE (89.3%), Q-banks (50%), and surgical textbooks (25.8%). The majority (56.1%) of programs reported using a year-long curriculum for ABSITE preparation, and 66.6% used a time-limited curriculum completed in the months immediately prior to ABSITE. Most programs reported that ABSITE scores were a low priority (63.6%) or not a priority (13.6%). The existence of a year-long curriculum for ABSITE was positively correlated with score as compared to programs without a year-long curricula (53.9% vs 48.5%, p
ISSN:1931-7204
1878-7452
1878-7452
DOI:10.1016/j.jsurg.2023.10.004