Abstract

PurposeTo assess the degree to which medical students choose to disengage from their regular preclinical curriculum and extracurricular activities in order to focus on United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Step 1 exam preparation, as well as learner-perceived effects of Step 1 preparation on their physical, social, and mental health.MethodOnline survey of medical students who have taken the USMLE Step 1 exam at a single large Midwestern academic medical center.ResultsThe response rate was 54%. Students often reported absenteeism from a variety of preclinical curricular activities, including lectures (44%) and didactics focusing on medical ethics (37%), clinical skills (28%), and encounters with actual and standardized patients (9%) in order to study for USMLE Step 1. Many students also forewent extracurricular opportunities including research (53%), elective patient care opportunities (45%), community service (39%), and healthcare advocacy experiences (38%) in order to study for USMLE Step 1. Majorities of students identified Step 1 preparation as a cause of burnout (79%) or significant anxiety or depression (61%), for which nearly a third sought mental healthcare; students also reported Step 1 preparation as a cause of engaging in dangerous behaviors such as illicit prescription stimulant use as well as driving or providing patient care while impaired by fatigue. In narrative comments, students frequently described Step 1 to be a barrier to their development into effective clinicians, the traditional medical school curriculum to be a barrier to performance on Step 1, or both.ConclusionsMedical students often prioritize Step 1 exam preparation over engaging with the standard preclinical curriculum, extracurricular opportunities, and activities to promote wellbeing. These findings have implications for the emphasis residency program directors place on single high-stakes standardized exams in the resident recruitment process.

Highlights

  • The United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Step 1 score is one of the most commonly used data points to filter residency program applicants and plays a large role in determining medical students' competitiveness for medical specialties and specific residency programs [1,2]

  • Students often reported absenteeism from a variety of preclinical curricular activities, including lectures (44%) and didactics focusing on medical ethics (37%), clinical skills (28%), and encounters with actual and standardized patients (9%) in order to study for USMLE Step 1

  • Many students forewent extracurricular opportunities including research (53%), elective patient care opportunities (45%), community service (39%), and healthcare advocacy experiences (38%) in order to study for USMLE Step 1

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Summary

Introduction

The United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Step 1 score is one of the most commonly used data points to filter residency program applicants and plays a large role in determining medical students' competitiveness for medical specialties and specific residency programs [1,2]. Residency programs' focus on USMLE Step 1 scores has resulted in a standardized test "arms race" among medical students; this is reflected in a mean Step 1 score increase from 200 in 1993 to 230 in 2018 [3]. This was not the original intent of the USMLE Step 1. While several studies correlate USMLE Step 1 scores with performance on future standardized tests, data on

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