Background: Our aim was to study pass rates of the American Board of Surgery (ABS) examinations for examinees from programs in the Southwestern Surgical Congress (SWSC) compared with the rest of the United States (Non-SWSC).
Methods: A retrospective review of pass rates of ABS Qualifying Examination (QE), Certifying Examination (CE), and QE/CE index from 2005 to 2015 was conducted.
Results: From 2005 to 2010, SWSC outperformed Non-SWSC in QE (88% vs 85%, P < .02), CE (86% vs 82%, P < .01), and QE/CE (77% vs 72%, P < .01). From 2010 to 2015, SWSC outperformed Non-SWSC in QE (91% vs 86%, P < .01) and QE/CE (77% vs 71%, P < .01) but did not achieve statistical significance in CE (83% vs 81%, P = .09).
Conclusions: SWSC programs outperformed Non-SWSC across QE and CE in the early period, but only on QE in the late period. We encourage SWSC states and regional surgical societies to evaluate performance on ABS examinations and collaborate to improve surgical training.
Keywords: American Board of Surgery; Board certification; Certifying Examination; Qualifying Examination; Surgical education.
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