Hey everyone,
I used many tips from this website when studying for the exam, and am thankful to those who posted some great advice. We have a relatively short surgery rotation of 8 weeks, it really flies by...
I studied pretty hard for this thing, mostly because everyone scared me about how difficult it would be. I used NMS Case Book x 1 (i.e. only read it once, excellent source for integrating your knowledge, but can be a bit disjointed since the book is set up as vignettes inside of vignettes), USMLE World surgery questions (went through all of them, which I believe was still less than 200, take your time with these, read all the explanations well, and I suggest re-reading each question stem even when you're checking your answers...a big part of this exam is figuring out how to THINK like they want you to so re-read the stem to understand that thought process once you know what the answer is), Kaplan Surgery (x2, I liked this the best, hands-down, and I usually never read anything x2!), and a QUICK read through case files surgery (basically I would read the case, the small blurb explaining the case on the following page, and then only the clinical pearls at the end of each case -- this lets you extract only the highest yield points without the drudgery of all the extra text, best down closer to the exam). This was all that I had time for, and I probably rushed through case files and parts of NMS case book as well. Clinical rotations were brutal time wise, so I did the best I could.
When I took the test, I must be honest, I thought that everything on the test was extremely fair. In fact, so many questions resembled UWorld Surgery questions, many resembled UWorld Medicine questions (I had taken medicine right before surgery so it was still relatively fresh, although I really thought that I had forgotten everything), and most could be answered with a good understanding of one of the surgery review books. I think the key is to read less sources but concentrate on the ones you know you can get through -- quality over quantity always. There were a few questions that I needed to recall from other rotations or a random factoid I learned on the floor (again, I really thought that I learned nothing on the floors, but something will probably stick), but these were rare and you either remembered it or you didn't. I felt that several questions were all about associating concepts, so if you had studied well it was knee-jerk, if not then it was a tough one to guess right.
Most of my friends thought it was tough however, so although I was pretty content immediately post-exam, I couldn't be sure.
I got my score back 2 days ago: 97 raw score. I'm pretty surprised, I've never actually seen a raw score that high. I didn't do anything differently than what others have done in the past, but I do believe that like with everything, its best to take your time to understand the material (read slowly and test yourself with vignettes or questions – this is how it will stick). Having medicine before surgery also gave me a shot at answering those straight up physio questions.
Thanks again to people on this thread who have immensely helped countless people like myself. Please PM me at anytime for questions or anything.