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. 2022 Jan 4;22(1):16.
doi: 10.1186/s12909-021-03055-2.

Student well-being during dedicated preparation for USMLE Step 1 and COMLEX Level 1 exams

Affiliations

Student well-being during dedicated preparation for USMLE Step 1 and COMLEX Level 1 exams

Sean Tackett et al. BMC Med Educ. .

Abstract

Background: Nearly all U.S. medical students engage in a 4-8 week period of intense preparation for their first-level licensure exams, termed a "dedicated preparation period" (DPP). It is widely assumed that student well-being is harmed during DPPs, but evidence is limited. This study characterized students' physical, intellectual, emotional, and social well-being during DPPs.

Methods: This was a cross-sectional survey sent electronically to all second-year students at four U.S. medical schools after each school's respective DPP for USMLE Step 1 or COMLEX Level 1 in 2019. Survey items assessed DPP characteristics, cost of resources, and perceived financial strain as predictors for 18 outcomes measured by items with Likert-type response options. Open-ended responses on DPPs' influence underwent thematic analysis.

Results: A total of 314/750 (42%) students completed surveys. DPPs lasted a median of 7 weeks (IQR 6-8 weeks), and students spent 70 h/week (IQR 56-80 h/week) studying. A total of 62 (20%) reported experiencing a significant life event that impacted their ability to study during their DPPs. Most reported 2 outcomes improved: medical knowledge base (95%) and confidence in ability to care for patients (56%). Most reported 9 outcomes worsened, including overall quality of life (72%), feeling burned out (77%), and personal anxiety (81%). A total of 25% reported paying for preparation materials strained their finances. Greater perceived financial strain was associated with worsening 11 outcomes, with reported amount spent associated with worsening 2 outcomes. Themes from student descriptions of how DPPs for first-level exams influenced them included (1) opportunity for synthesis of medical knowledge, (2) exercise of endurance and self-discipline required for professional practice, (3) dissonance among exam preparation resource content, formal curriculum, and professional values, (4) isolation, deprivation, and anguish from competing for the highest possible score, and (5) effects on well-being after DPPs.

Conclusions: DPPs are currently experienced by many students as a period of personal and social deprivation, which may be worsened by perceived financial stress more than the amount of money they spend on preparation materials. DPPs should be considered as a target for reform as medical educators attempt to prevent student suffering and enhance their well-being.

Keywords: COMLEX level 1; Medical students; USMLE step 1; Well-being.

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Conflict of interest statement

Dr. Tackett receives salary support from Osmosis for research and scholarship.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Percentages of 316 second-year students across 4 U.S. medical schools who reported changing for better or worse with their dedicated preparation period for first-level licensure exams. a Responses measured along a 5-point Likert-type scale. “No change” responses are not shown. Percentages refer to the absolute value of proportion of students experiencing the change

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