PMID: 8441080Feb 1, 1993Paper

The relevance to clinical practice of the certifying examination in internal medicine

Journal of General Internal Medicine
J J NorciniS E Goldfinger

Abstract

To determine the relevance of the initial certifying examination to the practice of internal medicine and the suitability of items used in initial certification for recertification. Using a matrix-sampling approach, items from the 1991 Certifying Examination were assigned to two sets of judges: directors of the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) and practicing general internists. Each judge rated the relevance of items on a five-point scale. 54 current or former directors of the ABIM and 72 practicing general internists; practitioners were nominated by directors and their ratings were included if they spent > 80% of their time in direct patient care. The directors' mean rating of all 576 items was 3.98 (SD = 0.62); the practitioners' mean rating was 4.11 (SD = 0.82). The directors assigned to 27 items ratings of less than 3 and the practitioners assigned to 42 items ratings of less than 3; seven of these items received low ratings from both groups. There were differences in the two groups' ratings of the relevance of various medical content categories, but the mean rating of core items was higher than that of noncore items and the mean rating of items testing clinical judgment was higher than that of items testing knowl...Continue Reading

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Citations

Aug 1, 1993·Journal of General Internal Medicine·M E Gozum
Jul 1, 1994·Journal of General Internal Medicine·J J NorciniM W Horne
Jul 1, 1994·Journal of General Internal Medicine·D C Dale
Jan 1, 1995·Journal of Nurse-midwifery·J T Fullerton, R Severino
Jan 18, 2011·Teaching and Learning in Medicine·Jonathan SherbinoGeoffrey R Norman
Mar 1, 1995·The American Journal of Medicine·J J Norcini, S C Day

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