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2020 Case Review Prep: Changes for 2020 Case Submission
ABFAS has made two important changes to the 2020 Case Review exam. First, we have deleted the requirement of a minimum 10 RRA Elective Osseous and minimum 2 RRA Nonelective Osseous in Appendix B. Instead, you will need to log 13 cases from any procedures listed below.
RRA Elective Osseous
• 5.2.4 midfoot, rearfoot, or ankle fusion
• 5.2.5 midfoot, rearfoot, or tibial osteotomy
• 5.2.9 ankle implant
• 5.2.10 corticotomy or osteotomy with callus distraction/correction of complex deformity of the midfoot, rearfoot, ankle, or tibia
RRA Nonelective Osseous
• 5.4.1 open repair of adult midfoot fracture
• 5.4.2 open repair of adult rearfoot fracture
• 5.4.3 open repair of adult ankle fracture
• 5.4.4 open repair of pediatric rearfoot/ankle fracture or dislocation
• 5.4.5 management of bone tumor/neoplasm (with or without bone graft)
This change should help you qualify for RRA case review. Registration opens on November 4, so please make sure you are logging your cases in PLS to see if you qualify for the 2020 exam.
Second, when you take the exam, you will only need to upload 11 cases, not 13. This will benefit you by not reducing the number of cases remaining in your selection pool in case you need to sit for Case Review again.
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Thoughts?
I feel this is a step in the right direction to allow more DPMs to sit for boards. Hopefully by doing this the ABFAS takes into consideration to modifying how they score the exams. All other medical specialties have a board certification pass rate in the 90%. Only podiatry has to make it ridiculously hard to pass boards. If the ABFAS feels compelled to have such dismal passing percentages year in and year out then the entire podiatry education and residency training model needs to be looked at and dissected. If podiatry school education and residency training are not producing residents who can regularly pass the podiatry board certification exam at comparable rates to other specialties then that is a huge red flag for our profession entirely. There is really no other way to explain it.
ABFAS has made two important changes to the 2020 Case Review exam. First, we have deleted the requirement of a minimum 10 RRA Elective Osseous and minimum 2 RRA Nonelective Osseous in Appendix B. Instead, you will need to log 13 cases from any procedures listed below.
RRA Elective Osseous
• 5.2.4 midfoot, rearfoot, or ankle fusion
• 5.2.5 midfoot, rearfoot, or tibial osteotomy
• 5.2.9 ankle implant
• 5.2.10 corticotomy or osteotomy with callus distraction/correction of complex deformity of the midfoot, rearfoot, ankle, or tibia
RRA Nonelective Osseous
• 5.4.1 open repair of adult midfoot fracture
• 5.4.2 open repair of adult rearfoot fracture
• 5.4.3 open repair of adult ankle fracture
• 5.4.4 open repair of pediatric rearfoot/ankle fracture or dislocation
• 5.4.5 management of bone tumor/neoplasm (with or without bone graft)
This change should help you qualify for RRA case review. Registration opens on November 4, so please make sure you are logging your cases in PLS to see if you qualify for the 2020 exam.
Second, when you take the exam, you will only need to upload 11 cases, not 13. This will benefit you by not reducing the number of cases remaining in your selection pool in case you need to sit for Case Review again.
--------------------------------
Thoughts?
I feel this is a step in the right direction to allow more DPMs to sit for boards. Hopefully by doing this the ABFAS takes into consideration to modifying how they score the exams. All other medical specialties have a board certification pass rate in the 90%. Only podiatry has to make it ridiculously hard to pass boards. If the ABFAS feels compelled to have such dismal passing percentages year in and year out then the entire podiatry education and residency training model needs to be looked at and dissected. If podiatry school education and residency training are not producing residents who can regularly pass the podiatry board certification exam at comparable rates to other specialties then that is a huge red flag for our profession entirely. There is really no other way to explain it.