Abstract
© 2014 The Authors.Aims and method: To assess trends of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology examination pass rates before and after the 2003 duty hours regulations (DHR). We obtained the pass rates for part I and II for years 2000-2010. Data were divided pre-DHR (2000-2003) and post-DHR (2007-2010). Results: During the pre-DHR period, first- and multiple-attempt group pass rates were 80.7% and 39.0% which changed in the post-DHR period to 89.7% and 39.1% respectively. Similarly for the part II exam, the pre-DHR first- and multiple-attempt group pass rates were 60.2% and 43.5% respectively, which increased to 78.7% and 53.8%, among the post-DHR group. Overall, there was a significant increase in the first-attempt candidates pass rates for parts I and II, whereas multiple-attempt candidates did not benefit as strongly. Clinical implications: The results suggest that the 2003 DHR may have had a positive impact on examination-based medical knowledge in psychiatry.
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CITATION STYLE
Jain, G., Dzara, K., Mazhar, M. N., & Punwani, M. (2014). Do regulated resident working hours affect medical graduate education? Trends in the American psychiatry board pass rates pre- and post-2003 duty hours regulations. The Psychiatric Bulletin, 38(6), 299–302. https://doi.org/10.1192/pb.bp.113.046292
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