Medical Boards: Prep

Hello Everyone!

Long time no see. Or long time no text? Anywho, I have finally finished my USMLE Step 1 and COMLEX level 1 boards! WOO!

Since the majority of what students online look up includes a study schedule, materials, and prep in general, I will lay out what I did. I am NOT claiming to have done amazingly well on either of these exams (at the time of writing I just recently finished) but I do believe I passed (later insert: I passed both). Majority of you will receive average scores and that is TOTALLY NORMAL. Some of you will be all gunners and shit and get that high score; good for you! But for most of you, you will be aiming to pass and hopefully get at least average.

Time Allotted: Dedicated

I started 6.5 weeks out from my exam. I however, am not like most students and cannot sit and study for 12 hours a day. I’d be happy if I could get a solid 4-5 hours in a day which is why I started a bit earlier. That way, I had time to add in breaks, have enough time to play catch up, change my study habits, and make sure I could get through a reasonable amount of material. Most students who can study for about 10-12 hours a day can do well in a 4 week block of dedicated. If you are aiming for an incredibly high score, you need to do a considerable amount of studying more to get those really rare nitpicky questions/experimental questions. Or just be even smarter than the average medical student (who is already hella smart).

Some days I could study longer; this left me unable to do very much studying the next day. Some days I barely studied, if at all. And that’s okay too. Each person will need to decide how they study, how they do under stress, and how much time they need to recover in order to hit the books hard everyday for several weeks.

Materials:

The following is what I used:

  • Boards and Beyond. I did the videos for several sections. It is VERY IN-DEPTH. Hell, I learned more about the subject than I ever did in my actual courses. It is great for physiology for sure, and does a really great job of presenting information. I started with this before I realized I was hitting a wall and switched my study habits. It also has like 2000 questions or something crazy like that.
  • First Aid. Your Bible for studying. It is a review book and you should NOT MEMORIZE IT. You should understand the concepts given. A chunk of it you will already know/be familiar with, so you won’t need to use an outside source. If you don’t understand it, take the time to learn it. If you learned the material well the first go around, you’ll have an easier time reviewing it. I reviewed it in essence about twice before my exam (give or take a few sections). Once more in-depth, and once as a quick review.
  • SKETCHY. Holy hell yes. Learn these. There was a fair amount of it on my step 1, although in general I thought step did a good job of evenly picking between all topics. There was a shit ton of micro my year on my comlex. If you use sketchy, make sure you use the Pepper Anki deck or the book or whatever it is you want to use associated with it so you can lock it in your brain. Just watching the sketch will not be as helpful. You need to be able to see multiple passes so you can use the memory aids to help you on test day.
  • ANKI. I used some decks, but not all. I actually used a couple of the ZANKI decks to study for my courses, so the material for this information came back really quick. If you are a flash card person, this is the entire first aid book in flash card form. If this works for you, go for it. I used it here and there to help me. This is the site link for Zanki decks that follow First Aid: https://www.medschoolanki.com
  • SAVARESE. For OMT. Highly recommended by my osteopathic professors to study for boards. It again, is a review book. But does have review questions at the end of each chapter. Your school (at least for KCU) may have taught subjects slightly differently than the book; so if you need to review your osteopathic notes based on the topic you are reviewing in Savarese, do so.
  • Truelearn and Uworld questions. Yes. You need to do practice questions. Doesn’t matter what you use, but you need to test yourself and do a large amount. I did a little under 2000 combined before my exams. Truelearn is for comlex, Uworld is more for step. There are other level 1 banks that are more similar to comlex questions (COMQUEST, COMSE), but you need to pay for these. In general, KCU provided Truelearn access for free at the start of second year.

There are several other video programs you can use (i.e. DIT, Kaplan, etc.) if you are a video oriented person. I’ve heard of other students using DIT with good success as it also includes OMT.

There are also several other question banks you can use like AMBOSS (which was another very popular question bank to use among classmates). You will find several other options; make sure you don’t overpay for several services and overwhelm yourself when picking study materials to assist you in learning. You want to use what will be useful to you.

Study Schedule:

Well, I tried to make a schedule. I did. But I am terrible at putting too much on my plate and then feeling like shit when I don’t complete it. Or thinking I can finish something in a “reasonable” amount of time and realize my brain needs more breaks in between. Oh, and did I mention my anxiety? That got in the way a lot too. I’m an anxious avoider, so avoiding is my game. And I am number 1 at that.

Here is the link for my “study” schedule. I did not break it down by time in the day like most students. I picked an amount of material that I wanted to do that day and would try to achieve. A lot of days I put too much on my plate and ended up taking several more days to finish. Around week 3/4 I switched up my study plan of action.

My drive study schedule: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1jQvuDTzWYgE_eNqYGpX542JmrHDRb1Bw4oCxWYJr1Ew/edit?usp=sharing

I started with Boards & Beyond. I completed either all or most of the following videos & questions with B&B:

  • Hematology
  • MSK
  • Skin
  • psych
  • renal
  • neuro
  • repro

Then after hitting a wall I decided to switch to reading First Aid and if I needed more clarification/teaching I would watch a B&B video to help. These are the following subjects I read in FA:

  • Cardio
  • Pulm
  • GI
  • Endo
  • Public Health/epi

I punted biochemistry and most of immunology. I had immunology in my master’s program and honestly the physician who taught it did such a great job that I didn’t really need to review it much. I learned what I needed to for medical school immunology but overall, didn’t review much.

I used Uworld and Truelearn questions in addition to B&B questions. I did not learn very many drugs…. but I watched what I did in B&B and tried to learn some of the other drugs in FA. However I did not commit very many to memory. Oops!

And then Sketchy for micro and Savarese for OMT.

I did 1867 questions before Step 1 and 2137 before Level 1.

Picking a Date:

I originally scheduled my exams for July 6th and 10th. Initially we were required to finish our comlex level 1 by July 17th by our school. We were not given a time to complete step 1 as this was optional for us. It was recommended to me that if I take both exams, to do step 1 first and level 1 second. That way, you don’t spend time studying for OMT before step, and only use the time between exams to study for OMT. Makes sense right? Make sure to not schedule level 1 too much later than your step so you still have all the information you studied in your noggin (and don’t have to restudy).

I took my exams during COVID-19. Many student exams were cancelled several times during a period of several months; a lot of times without being notified. It was very nerve-racking not knowing if you were going to be cancelled or not. And if you were cancelled, trying to get another seat or get a seat near where you lived/where your rotation site was. Due to this, our time to take the exam was extended until December 2020. Seems fair; except we start rotations August 1st, and were not given any additional time off to study for an exam if you were scheduled after starting at your rotation site. I feel for my fellow classmates who this happened too.

I was damn lucking enough to not be cancelled for either of my original test dates. Hopefully by the time ya’ll take your exams, you aren’t dealing with a pandemic!

When you do schedule your exams, DO NOT CHANGE YOUR DATES. It will cost you additional money. Not to mention, you will never be ready. I promise. You will push your test back till the cows come home and still not be ready. Pick a date and commit. Unless you have a valid reason to reschedule, just don’t. If you are nervous, make sure you are properly taking care of your mental health. (See managing your anxiety/depression below).

Taking Both Exams: How do I decide?

As an MD student you only take USMLE step 1. You wouldn’t be able to take COMLEX level 1 because you never learned osteopathic manipulation during your first two years. And because MD was much more widely accepted for a longer period of time than DO, a lot of residency sites know the step 1 scores they are looking for in their applicants.

DO students have to take COMLEX level 1 to get their degrees. Which is kinda bull crap because it is a longer and harder test (in my opinion). Step 1 currently is 8 hours, with 7 blocks of 40 questions or 280 questions total and 45 minutes of break time. So essentially an 8 hour test day. Level 1 is currently 9 hours, with 8 blocks of 50 questions or 400 questions total and 60 minutes of break time. Or about a 9 hour exam.

Historically, DO students looking for competitive residencies would take both exams; as most residencies who weren’t DO specific were usually unsure of the comlex scoring system and required step anyway. Or it was the case of wanting to sub specialize in an MD prominent field. So in order to just bypass the hassle of this, a fair amount of students take both. DO students are not required to take both though.

In the future, they will be merging the exams for both MD and DO students. Not sure when this will occur or how it will pan out. When this happens, there will be one exam for everyone (and likely an optional OMT section for DO students). Which makes sense seeing as they merged residencies already.

Managing your Anxiety/Depression:

Although a lot of you may not want to address this, you need to.

Boards is incredibly anxiety inducing and it is very common for students who are already burned out after their first 2 years of medical school to have a spike in anxiety, depression, and mental breakdowns. Because of this, it is common (but not always talked about) to be placed on a brief stint of antidepressants to help control this.

If you feel your mental wellbeing is becoming compromised, take care of yourself and seek help. SSRI’s/SNRI’s take 4-6 weeks to kick in. Make sure you give yourself ample amount of time to get used to the medication as well (as you may have some starting side effects like me) and for the drug to take effect. If this means seeking out assistance/guidance/medical help before your dedicated period then do it. If it means doing it at some point during your first two years because medical school is hella stressful, then do it.

I’m not judging you. And neither should anyone else. If they are, then they shouldn’t be going into medicine at all. It says more about their character than yours.

Additionally, make sure you schedule breaks, downtime, and self-care time. The longer you get into your dedicated period, the more you will need to break and care for yourself. I initially scheduled Sundays as my break day and then would freak out because I couldn’t get through what I wanted during the week. So for the first 3 weeks I skipped my break day.

That went terrible. Don’t do what I did.

Once I fully committed to taking a day off to just do nothing, clean, run my errands, etc, I was SO MUCH MORE PRODUCTIVE when I hit the books the next day.

And while you are at it, do not neglect your daily needs. Showering, eating, grocery shopping, taking care of your pets, or even working out. Make sure you are still doing it. If you need to use part of your day off to go grocery shopping/meal prep, or run other errands, then do this on that day as well. You will still have plenty of time to get your chores in and schedule some extra self love!

Well everyone, I think that is all for this post. Stay tuned for more boards content. Cheers!

Scribe Series: Full Chart Examples!

Hello hello!

I decided I was in a very giving mood and wanted to give some examples of full SOAP notes. Since a chunk of you who show up to my site are here for the scribing practice and explanations, I figured I’d try to give you some more resources.

I have added a blank or a general SOAP note template here. This full out SOAP note is pretty in-depth. It would likely be used more for general wellness exams at a family practice office, internal medicine visit, or possibly a pre-operative full H&P. Many other specialties do take the same format as this note, they just don’t necessarily have as much information or as detailed of information.

Here is an example of an ER note.  I based this one off of my posts *scribe series: HPI practice case 2*. Which you can check out by clicking the link.

Here is an example of an ENT focused note. It is not quite as in depth as the charts I used to write were simply because I can’t remember every detail of how I did those notes. The pathology for them as well is getting hazy too. I used to work in several ENT subspecialties and I have to tell you, this was one of the hardest scribing jobs I had. Each specialty was so incredibly specific yet all in the same small area of the body. I chose to do a hearing related one as neuro-otology was one of my favorite subspecialties. Rhinology/sinus was my second favorite, only because I then spent the most time here. It took me forever to cross train scribes as their providers also usually only worked 1-2 days a week. [Insert your favorite eye rolling emoji here].

Here is an example of an ortho follow up note.  This one is a little more rough (I know). It’s been a hot minute since I did an ortho note so take it with a grain of salt. But basically the first paragraph you want to summarize all the previous history/surgeries and the second HPI paragraph you want to give an update for how they are doing in the office the day you are seeing them. The goal is to continue to add on to the first paragraph with pertinent information from the last visit so you have it all in one note.

Here is an example of an urgent visit note . Say from a level 3 ER case, an urgent visit at the family/internal medicine office, or possibly at an urgent care.

What are some differences that you notice between these charting types? What are some similarities? Do you notice how the more focused notes don’t have as many ROS and PE systems as a full generalized well exam would?

Look at how I tend to word my HPI’s or how I might put things in the physical exam. There are definitely some findings that can go under multiple systems on the PE; pick one for that chart or try to pick one system that you would generally put it under.

I personally liked to bold the abnormal findings when doing charts in programs that do not automatically bold them or highlight them in red. As a scribe, this is a nice touch to help your provider or other medical staff see the abnormal findings more quickly. But by all means, this is not necessary to have in your chart.

*As a side note, these will be read only. You may feel free to print them off and mark them up. Or make a copy on your own drive and mess around with them.

Cheers!