학술논문

Scope and Nature of Pain- and Analgesia-Related Content of the United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE)
Document Type
article
Source
Pain Medicine. 19(3)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Clinical Research
Pain Research
Chronic Pain
Neurosciences
Generic health relevance
Quality Education
Clinical Competence
Education
Medical
Undergraduate
Educational Measurement
Humans
Licensure
Medical
Pain Management
Pain Content
Education
Competency
USMLE
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Anesthesiology
Clinical sciences
Health services and systems
Clinical and health psychology
Language
Abstract
Background"The ongoing opioid crisis lies at the intersection of two substantial public health challenges-reducing the burden of suffering from pain and containing the rising toll of the harms that can result from the use of opioid medications" [1]. Improved pain education for health care providers is an essential component of the multidimensional response to both still-unmet challenges [2,3]. Despite the importance of licensing examinations in assuring competency in health care providers, there has been no prior appraisal of pain and related content within the United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE).MethodsAn expert panel developed a novel methodology for characterizing USMLE questions based on pain core competencies and topical and public health relevance.ResultsUnder secure conditions, raters used this methodology to score 1,506 questions, with 28.7% (432) identified as including the word "pain." Of these, 232 questions (15.4% of the 1,506 USMLE questions reviewed) were assessed as being fully or partially related to pain, rather than just mentioning pain but not testing knowledge of its mechanisms and their implications for treatment. The large majority of questions related to pain (88%) focused on assessment rather than safe and effective pain management, or the context of pain.ConclusionsThis emphasis on assessment misses other important aspects of safe and effective pain management, including those specific to opioid safety. Our findings inform ways to improve the long-term education of our medical and other graduates, thereby improving the health care of the populations they serve.