Nitipatana Chierakul MD*,**, Somwang Danchaivijitr MD*,**, Paka Kontee BBA*, Chana Naruman MSc**
Affiliation : * Subcommittee for Training and Examination, The Royal College of Physicians of Thailand, Bangkok, Thailand ** Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand
Objective : To evaluate the effect of examiner subjectivity and heterogeneity among the cases on scores from the Royal College
of Physicians (RCPT) long case examination.
Material and Method: Data from internal medicine candidates who performed clinical part of RCPT board certifying
examination in academic year 2008 were collected. For each candidate, scores from pair of examiners for each of the long
case was stratified based on disease category according to the course syllabus into 3 groups; very common, common and
uncommon diseases. The scores also categorized according to difficulty level subjectively and rated by the examiners into 3
levels; easy, moderate and difficult. Mean scores in each group of encounters were compared using ANOVA.
Results : There were 21 examination centers involved with 1,840 number of encounters by 232 candidates. Among 437
patients that have been used for the long case, common scenarios (27.6% of the total) were cirrhosis, hyperthyroidism,
cerebral thrombosis, bronchogenic carcinoma, rheumatic heart disease and thalassemia. Mean and SD of scores from the
very common, common and uncommon diseases were 75.5 + 11.6, 75.6 + 10.6 and 74.7 + 11.3 respectively, with no statistical
significant difference between the groups. Mean and SD of scores from the easy, moderate and difficult cases were 76.1 + 10.5,
74.8 + 11.0, 75.5 + 10.9 respectively. The moderate group has the lowest score with a statistical significant difference from
other groups (p = 0.042).
Conclusion : In current RCPT long case examination, difficulty of the case appears to contribute to variation in scores derived
from the examiners. Measures for score adjustment and examiner calibration should be implemented in the future.
Keywords : Long case, Patient heterogeneity, Examiner heterogeneity
JOURNAL OF THE MEDICAL ASSOCIATION OF THAILAND
4th Floor, Royal Golden Jubilee Building,
2 Soi Soonvijai, New Petchburi road,
Bangkok 10310, Thailand.
Phone: 0-2716-6102, 0-2716-6962
Fax: 0-2314-6305
Email: editor@jmatonline.com
» Online Submissions » Author Guidelines » Copyright Notice » Privacy Statement
» Journal Sponsorship » Site Map » About this Publishing System
© MEDICAL ASSOCIATION OF THAILAND. All Rights Reserved. The content of this site is intended for health professionals.