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Took the Step II CS exam a few weeks ago and found out today that I passed. I'd like to post a brief thread with some ideas that helped me out immensely. I took it "early" because I've heard that some programs will not rank you unless you have taken/passed Step II CS.
First off, don't let people deter you from studying with idiotic comments like, "all you need to do is pass your third year and you're golden." This is a fallacy. While you probably would pass even if you didn't study at all, is this a risk you're willing to take? Step II CS is an exam that is best summarized as, "of no additional benefit if you pass, but catastrophic if you fail." Therefore, why risk it?
That said, the book to buy (as others have posted) is First Aid for the Step II Clinical Skills Exam. It is a very fast read and incredibly helpful. Of note, pay attention to the first chapter that talks about the exam itself (logistics, format, etc.) and the end that has 25 cases or so that are best done with a partner. This is where a wife/boyfriend/husband/girlfriend comes in very handy. My wife was an immense help to me. She would review a case for 5 minutes, sit with the book in her lap, and answer questions in a very similar fashion as a SP (standardized patient). This was a huge help. The middle of the book has a laundry list of chief complaints --> questions to ask --> physical exam aspects --> differential diagnoses --> next steps in management. This part is absolutely worthless and I didn't even look at it.
At the end of the day, there are a few key points that are in the FA for Step II CS that I'd like to stress:
First off, don't let people deter you from studying with idiotic comments like, "all you need to do is pass your third year and you're golden." This is a fallacy. While you probably would pass even if you didn't study at all, is this a risk you're willing to take? Step II CS is an exam that is best summarized as, "of no additional benefit if you pass, but catastrophic if you fail." Therefore, why risk it?
That said, the book to buy (as others have posted) is First Aid for the Step II Clinical Skills Exam. It is a very fast read and incredibly helpful. Of note, pay attention to the first chapter that talks about the exam itself (logistics, format, etc.) and the end that has 25 cases or so that are best done with a partner. This is where a wife/boyfriend/husband/girlfriend comes in very handy. My wife was an immense help to me. She would review a case for 5 minutes, sit with the book in her lap, and answer questions in a very similar fashion as a SP (standardized patient). This was a huge help. The middle of the book has a laundry list of chief complaints --> questions to ask --> physical exam aspects --> differential diagnoses --> next steps in management. This part is absolutely worthless and I didn't even look at it.
At the end of the day, there are a few key points that are in the FA for Step II CS that I'd like to stress:
- Always smile. Be friendly. Shake hands when you enter the room and call the patient by name.
- Be very aware of the time. Many students fell short on time on test day. Practicing with a SP will be crucial here.
- Wash your hands before every physical exam. Be courteous about draping, etc.
- Be prepared for a phone conversation.
- Be prepared for talking to a mother about "Johnny" who isn't even there in the room.
- Be prepared to write short notes. I had to tailor every note, because you will have less space to write than you're accustomed to.
- Always be sure to ask the patient, "Do you have any questions? Any concerns?"
- Always summarize, at some point, the patient's history.
- Don't rattle through a laundry-list ROS. I found that my patients, when asked, "Have you had any diarrhea or constipation?" would always answer, "no constipation." Be sure to ask a concise ROS and give the patient time to answer.
- Pay attention to FA's section on "difficult patients." Keep in mind that EVERY patient has a question that you will need to answer empathetically ("Do I have cancer, doc?" "I can't pay for my pills." etc.)
- Be nice. Smile.
- Don't get stressed WHEN you run out of time on a patient, not completely finish a note, forget to examine a complete organ system, or feel like a patient was being a b!tch. All of this happened to me and I still passed.