Abstract

ContextThe Japan Residency Matching Program (JRMP) launched in 2003 and is now a significant event for graduating medical students and postgraduate residency hospitals. The environment surrounding JRMP changed due to Japanese health policy, resulting in an increase in the number of unsuccessfully-matched students in the JRMP. Beyond policy issues, we suspected there were also common characteristics among the students who do not get a match with residency hospitals.MethodsIn total 237 out of 321 students at The University of Tokyo Faculty of Medicine graduates from 2018 to 2020 participated in the study. The students answered to the questionnaire and gave written consent for using their personal information including the JRMP placement, scores of the pre-clinical clerkship (CC) Objective Structured Clinical Examinations (OSCE), the Computer-Based Test (CBT), the National Board Examination (NBE), and domestic scores for this study. The collected data were statistically analyzed.ResultsThe JRMP placements were correlated with some of the pre-CC OSCE factors/stations and/or total scores/global scores. Above all, the result of neurological examination station had most significant correlation between the JRMP placements. On the other hand, the CBT result had no correlation with the JRMP results. The CBT results had significant correlation between the NBE results.ConclusionsOur data suggest that the pre-clinical clerkship OSCE score and the CBT score, both undertaken before the clinical clerkship, predict important outcomes including the JRMP and the NBE. These results also suggest that the educational resources should be intensively put on those who did not make good scores in the pre-clinical clerkship OSCE and the CBT to avoid the failure in the JRMP and the NBE.

Highlights

  • Objective structured clinical examinations (OSCE) [1] have been used worldwide for decades and are currently used to assess medical students in more than 100 countries

  • Comparison with Japan residency matching program (JRMP) unmatched versus matched We first analyzed two-group comparison of each factor of the pre-clinical clerkship (CC) OSCE between students who were successfully matched through Japan Residency Matching Program (JRMP) and those who were unmatched

  • The “concerns and process” (CP) factor, which evaluates the consideration for the patients, had significant correlation with the JRMP result (p = 0.0075)

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Summary

Introduction

Objective structured clinical examinations (OSCE) [1] have been used worldwide for decades and are currently used to assess medical students in more than 100 countries. The pre-CC OSCE is provided by a Public Interest Incorporated Association, Common Achievement Tests Organization (CATO) and includes nine stations: (1) medical interview; (2) basic life support; (3) basic medical procedure; physical examinations of (4) head and neck, (5) chest, (6) vital signs, (7) abdomen, and (8) limb and spines; and (9) neurological examinations. The NBE is provided by The Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare Medical students in their last year and those who have graduated from medical school or a university faculty of medicine take the NBE to get their doctor’s license. This examination is administered over 2 days, as marksheets with 400 questions. In Spring 2020, 10,462 students applied for the examination and 9341 of them passed it

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