- Joined
- Jul 22, 2016
- Messages
- 14
- Reaction score
- 6
I scored a 480. Anyone here still matched to a decent AOA specialty with a low Comlex? What was your game changer?
The mean is actually 520. A 500 puts someone at about the 44th percentile, which still isn't awful.The median score on the Comlex is 500. By defintion ONE HALF of all DO's score less than 500.
I assure you the doors are far from closed
The mean is actually 520. A 500 puts someone at about the 44th percentile, which still isn't awful.
The median score on the Comlex is 500. By defintion ONE HALF of all DO's score less than 500.
I assure you the doors are far from closed
I didn't know the average and the mean differ that much.
I swear to god they got to make stats a mandatory 2 year requirement in medical school...
I think Madjack knew that and was disputing the median value you posted.
Oh Boy....
The "Average" and the Mean do mean the same thing.....
The Median is however a different statistical number and is defined as the number separating the higher half of a data sample from the lower half. It is BY DEFINITION the half way marker.
The mean and median are sometimes be the same number, but are actually different statistical values.
Those drug company pharmaceutical studies are gonna LOOOOOOVE you.....
I mean they obviously publish the median if they give percentiles. The median is the 50th percentile.As far as I know, the AOA does not, nor have they ever, published median scores. I assumed you had made a mistake and referred to the mean as the median, side median data is not available to the general public. The AOA publishes a tool that allows one to calculate the percentile rank of a given score. That places a 500 at the 44th percentile, which, unless percentiles work different in your world, would mean that 44 percent of people scored a well or less.
Regardless, the time of your reply was highly disrespectful and a violation of the ToS and has been reported.
You can figure it out from the tool- 50th is 513, if I weren't at a bachelor party right now I'd figure out the SD and such. But there's no paper they release with the median, unlike the mean and SD for the mean, which the publish in multiple places.I mean they obviously publish the median if they give percentiles. The median is the 50th percentile.
Oh Boy....
The "Average" and the Mean do mean the same thing.....
The Median is however a different statistical number and is defined as the number separating the higher half of a data sample from the lower half. It is BY DEFINITION the half way marker.
The mean and median are sometimes be the same number, but are actually different statistical values.
Those drug company pharmaceutical studies are gonna LOOOOOOVE you.....
You can figure it out from the tool- 50th is 513, if I weren't at a bachelor party right now I'd figure out the SD and such. But there's no paper they release with the median, unlike the mean and SD for the mean, which the publish in multiple places.
Thank you. I accidently wrote average instead of median and then went on to correct it when I saw that. Can you like not be so snarky?
p.s I'm pretty good at statistics and research methods.
If you say so...
I'd say FM, Peds, Surgery at some programs, IM, Ob/Gyn, EM (some programs)I scored a 480. Anyone here still matched to a decent AOA specialty with a low Comlex? What was your game changer?
Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!I swear to god they got to make stats a mandatory 2 year requirement in medical school...
The amount of biostats a person in medical school needs isn't really something that one needs to spend 2 years teaching. Ex. a basic introduction into reading statistics and then a follow up on basic research design, methods, and how to extrapolate data would at most take a semester with maybe an hour of lecture every other week tops. There's no reason to bother ppl to learn how to calculate confidence intervals, or how to not make type 1 or 2 errors.
There have been doctors and statisticians who have actually written books on this subject. Having only that one semester course in biostats/epi is inadequate when the field of medicine keeps changing through the years. A large amount of the stuff learned in medical school will either be obsolete or proven incorrect by the time that student practices as an attending. This is why being able to effectively evaluate journal articles is important, since it is the most recent information.
There are doctors till this day who do procedures that either have weak evidence or almost no evidence at all. For example, arthroscopic knee surgery was done for joint pain for decades. However, a large scale randomized clinical trial in NEJM showed that this surgery was as effective as the placebo. So doctors have been doing this surgery based on weak evidence for years. Then you have doctors who have no problems with weak evidence as long as they can make money off of the procedure.
Then there are those docs who rely so much on mechanistic knowledge that they are in denial when a treatment doesn't work on a prescribed pathway (ex. cholesterol medication that doesn't reduce mortality). I'm not say that people need to be experts to the point of setting up their own studies. What I am referring to is having the knowledge to correctly interpret those confidence intervals, strength of study designs, and knowledge of correct clinical end points. This knowledge is what has the potential to save lives.
I suppose a semester would be ok, no more than that. it is too much! You should have an exam on it though before going off to residency.There have been doctors and statisticians who have actually written books on this subject. Having only that one semester course in biostats/epi is inadequate when the field of medicine keeps changing through the years. A large amount of the stuff learned in medical school will either be obsolete or proven incorrect by the time that student practices as an attending. This is why being able to effectively evaluate journal articles is important, since it is the most recent information.
There are doctors till this day who do procedures that either have weak evidence or almost no evidence at all. For example, arthroscopic knee surgery was done for joint pain for decades. However, a large scale randomized clinical trial in NEJM showed that this surgery was as effective as the placebo. So doctors have been doing this surgery based on weak evidence for years. Then you have doctors who have no problems with weak evidence as long as they can make money off of the procedure.
Then there are those docs who rely so much on mechanistic knowledge that they are in denial when a treatment doesn't work on a prescribed pathway (ex. cholesterol medication that doesn't reduce mortality). I'm not say that people need to be experts to the point of setting up their own studies. What I am referring to is having the knowledge to correctly interpret those confidence intervals, strength of study designs, and knowledge of correct clinical end points. This knowledge is what has the potential to save lives.
Again, the ability to read a research, understand its design, the limitations of the findings, and to understand what future research should be hypothesized to cover deficits does not take significant amounts of time. What does take time is spending time teaching you how to learn how to use softwares for statistics and or the actually math. Which is utterly useless for doctors.
Likewise learning that your procedures aren't doing crap is a problem in all fields of healthcare. You're legitimately pretending that there is malicious intent and or that it is driven ignorance.
I've had multiple courses in epidemiology where I haven't touched programing software. I'm not saying that doctors have to be able to use softwares for statistics. They need to realize the limitations of the studies that they are using. In the majority of cases, doctors are fine and there is not much that can be done with limited evidence. The problem is there are some doctors who push for treatments that have limited evidence when it is better to do nothing at all. As stated by the linked article, arthroscopic knee surgery is still used widely even today (even with this article and others as strong evidence).
I have not inferred in my statement that there is malicious intent amongst these doctors (there are some who believe in these treatments with weak evidence to a fault, they still care about their patients). However, yes there is ignorance amongst some. At the same time, there is no incentive in making sure a current practice is effective. By learning how to interpret the evidence, even in the early stages of learning, only helps to reduce mistakes made in health care. It is definitely a problem not pretend.
This article shows of the 360 reaffirming care, 146 or 40% were already in practices but then advised reversal (stopping of practice).
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23871230
And I have a year of research design and statistics that make me think that these things have less to do with the capacity to interpret as much as their training, the convention, and what others are doing around them.
Lol... Biostats was only a 7-8 hrs course at my low tier MD school. On the other hand, we had about 40 hours of professionalism 🙁I swear to god they got to make stats a mandatory 2 year requirement in medical school...
It's weird that 400 is passing score for COMLEX and yet one can score >800...
145-150 is nowhere a passing score for step 1.
If the average score for COMLEX is 513 (per MadJack), I wonder what the standard deviation (std) is. Let say the std is 70, so someone who got 800 is >3 std above average. WTF is wrong with that picture?
It's weird that 400 is passing score for COMLEX and yet one can score >800...
145-150 is nowhere a passing score for step 1.
If the average score for COMLEX is 513 (per MadJack), I wonder what the standard deviation (std) is. Let say the std is 70, so someone who got 800 is >3 std above average. WTF is wrong with that picture?
You're talking single digit people who get 800. That's kind of consistent with the .13% of DOs above 3 SDs. An 800+ is pretty much the same as a 280+, so while such people exist, we're still talking handfuls.
It's unheard of for people to get <170 on the step. It's also unheard of for people to get <350 on the COMLEX. The low pass rate is usually a little less than 2 SDs below the mean. Same is true for the USMLE. Neither are perfectly normal distributions.
Do you know if the percentile scores actually amount to concrete % answers right? I.e i've heard that a 400 = 70% correct.
That's very generous! Based on NBME self assessment exams, 80%+ corresponds to average on step1... I guess USMLE step1 questions might be a lot easier than COMLEX....There is a correlation, but its nowhere near that high. I think 400 is like 45-48% correct. ~63% corresponds to the average/median (500-520). I think 600+ and you're at ~75%. I think 700 gets you into the 90s. I'm sure it varies though, but those are the rough numbers floating around.
That's very generous! Based on NBME self assessment exams, 80%+ corresponds to average on step1... I guess USMLE step1 questions might be a lot easier than COMLEX....
Probably....Step1 is also very generous when compared with NBMEs. I'm sure that I missed enough qs to score ~20 points lower than my real score had it been an NBME test.
I was freaked out by horror stories of people with high COMSAE's and USMLE's failing COMLEX. My USMLE was relatively higher than my COMLEX-- more so than the majority of posters here-- yet I did not come anywhere remotely close to failing. The most disparate scores I have seen here is high 400's/~230.There is a correlation, but its nowhere near that high. I think 400 is like 45-48% correct. ~63% corresponds to the average/median (500-520). I think 600+ and you're at ~75%. I think 700 gets you into the 90s. I'm sure it varies though, but those are the rough numbers floating around.
I was freaked out by horror stories of people with high COMSAE's and USMLE's failing COMLEX. My USMLE was relatively higher than my COMLEX-- more so than the majority of posters here-- yet I did not come anywhere remotely close to failing. The most disparate scores I have seen here is high 400's/~230.
Family practice or internal medicine.I scored a 480. Anyone here still matched to a decent AOA specialty with a low Comlex? What was your game changer?