January 2020 Tip of the Month

February Dallas Mock Orals 

ABC Mock Oral Examiner, Krishna Das, MD, FACOG

Are you one of the last to sit for your ABOG oral boards?  Mock orals are the key to passing your exam.  We will question you on your cast list or the structured cases format exam, fine-tune your articulation and work out those last-minute jitters.  Call ABC today to schedule.

ABOG 2019 ORAL Exam Candidates JANUARY Exam Candidates

The holidays are finally over. You thought January would never get here. Well, it’s here! You can sure identify with your patients who go into labor. Be careful what you wish for, right? The #1 regret of exam takers is that they wished they had done more mock orals. You have all kinds of resources to tap into - local and regional colleagues, as well as academicians, subspecialists, and generalists. An eye-to-eye encounter is the best, but don’t forget you can do them over the telephone, too. The ABC faculty are just a dial away for a Telephone Mock Oral exam to get the professional touch.  After each mock oral, figure out your new game plan and try it out with the next one. A great way to pull it all together (or salvage what’s left if you’ve procrastinated) is to take advantage of our Do or Die in Dallas service. When we say, “We’re with you every step”, we mean that literally. Dr. Quinn Peeper will be right there in Dallas the week of your exam. He will do whatever it takes to get YOU feeling confident just before your test. It’s too late and certainly not helpful to hide within a group or camp just days before your test. Whereas examining is a team effort; unfortunately, being examined is solo.  We can give Mock Oral Exams, test you with our signature Structured Cases, defuse those landmines on your case list, or even give you a crash lecture on a weak topic. You need to eat, drink and sleep OB/GYN and set the stage for your big day.

FEBRUARY Exam Candidates

You’ve known you were the last group since July, and you thought February would never get here. The exam has been hanging over you and dampening all your holidays. Well finally lets git’ r’ done!. A great way to pull it all together, or salvage what’s left if you procrastinated, is to take advantage of our Do or Die in Dallas service. We’re bringing our best, so you can be at your best. Dr. Krishna Das will be in Dallas from Sunday, February 16th to Wednesday, February 19th. She will do whatever it takes to get you feeling confident just before your test. She can give Mock Oral Exams, test you with our signature Structured Cases, defuse those landmines on your Case List, or even give you a crash lecture on a weak topic. Candidates are now booking their flights and appointments with Dr. Das.  Call today to reserve your space.

Test Taking Technique  

Need Category I CME hours?  We go through a rigorous application process each year to provide AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ hours to our course registrants.  In addition, our review courses are great for the busy practitioner who is interested in the latest guidelines and clinical pearls.

About half of the Structured Cases’ stem questions are followed by three questions:

What is your differential diagnosis?

How would you work up the patient?

How would you manage her?

At the end of each case is “Supplemental Questions by Examiner.”

You will start with the Structured Cases and there is no longer a chime signaling the halfway mark to transition to the case list. Just remember 70%. That’s all you need to pass the exam.  You do not need, nor will you likely get, 100% of the questions correct. The questions will come at you in rapid-fire succession. Often times, the examiner will push you until you finally don’t know the answer. Don’t misinterpret this as failing the question. On the contrary, you probably passed it long before, but the examiner may simply want to explore the depth of your knowledge, or at least reassure himself that you will acknowledge your limitations. Let the last question go and focus on the question at hand. Do not let the worry about whether or not you got the last question correct distract you and thereby compromise your chances of getting a sure pass question correct.

Remember, just 70%.

ABOG 2019 ORAL Exam Candidates

Happy New Year! The Chinese calendar says 2020 is the year of the exam. Make a resolution to not procrastinate preparing for your exam. Starting February 24th, you can apply for your exam at www.abog.org. Your application and the application fee of $840 are due by May 22nd. If you delay, you will incur stiff late fees. By now, you should have a system for organizing your data for the case list. For all GYN patients, collect the H&Ps, operative notes, pathology reports and discharge summaries. For all OB patients, keep a file of the prenatal forms, delivery notes, discharge summaries, and postpartum notes. Since you’re now halfway into collecting your cases, it’s time to start adding to your Office case list. Keep a list of all 40 categories on your desk. Collect no more than 6 names for each category. The bread & butter categories will fill up quickly. Start keeping an eye out for those categories that you want to talk about. It is unlikely, and unnecessary, to fill all 37 categories. Remember, you can only apply two patients per category. Also, don’t forget you have to provide the overall number of ultrasounds that you personally performed in the office, as well as on hospitalized patients. Just keep a tickler file for OB, GYN, and Office. Take a stab at entering the data on the case list forms - just use your common sense. Rest assured, we are offering our signature Case List Construction Workshop on March 31st. For those who are OCD, order your copy of Pass Your Oral Ob/Gyn Board Exam by Dr. Das, for a complete step-by-step guide. You’ve been collecting cases since the summer. It’s cold outside and you’ve nothing better to do, so start the good habit today of collecting and entering cases on a weekly basis at a minimum. If the weather outside is frightful, our Oral Exam Webinar Archives are delightful. These twelve 1-hour webinar sessions review high yield topics. They also contain structured cases throughout with answers from past registrants and feedback from our faculty. If you’re really anal, come to our March 31 – April 5 Board Review Course. The advantage of starting in the spring is that you have a good idea of the topics on your case list. You don’t have to do any heavy-duty studying until August, as your only priority from May to August 1st is to get that case list done and to design your strategy. However, once August 1st hits...ee gads! -there is precious little time to study if your exam is the first month (November). Thus, coming to a review course in the spring greatly facilitates exploding out of the starting block.

Case List Construction Tip

One of the most common mistakes is “column confusion” on the Office and Obstetrics case list. On the Obstetrics case list, the columns most confused are “Complications of Antepartum, Complications of Delivery or Postpartum, and Operative Procedures and/or Treatment”. Complications up to and including labor should go in the Antepartum column. Anything that happens in labor and postpartum should then go in the Complications of Delivery or Postpartum, including disorders of protracted labor, instrumented deliveries, shoulder dystocia, retained placenta, etc. On the Office Practice case list, the columns most confused are the “Diagnostic Procedures, Treatment, and Results” columns. The Results column is intended to be the result of your treatment, NOT the results of your procedures. Put the results of your procedures in parenthesis after the procedure IN the Diagnostic Procedure column.

For example:

PROBLEM

DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES       

TREATMENT

RESULTS

ASCUS Pap, +HPV

Colposcopy

(ECC –benign margins Ectocx – CIN 3)

LEEP

CIS with clear

                                                                                                                                    

Chief Residents Planning a Subspecialty Fellowship

Subspecialty fellows are permitted to select 20 patients from their Chief resident year for their off specialty case list. In other words, GYN Oncologists, REI and Urogynecologists will need an OB list and MFMs need a GYN list. Therefore, make sure to hold onto that residency log! Refer to the ABOG Bulletin as to how those 20 patients are selected. To be on the safe side, we recommend you collect at least 30, so you can strategically select the final 20 later. For those patients, keep a file of the following: for the GYN patients, collect the H&Ps, operative notes, pathology reports and discharge summaries. For the OB patients, keep a file of the prenatal forms, delivery notes, discharge summaries, and postpartum notes. Don’t worry at all about the office patients, as you may compile these only during your fellowship A word of caution – right now you are at your peak for general OB/GYN knowledge. Believe it or not, two years from now your knowledge base will regress to that of an intern. Yes, it’s true -if you don’t use it, you lose it. So those really cool, esoteric, bizarre, once-in-a-career cases now will be a nightmare to defend later. Your greatest allies are your junior residents. If they can’t easily defend the case, cease and desist and “go fish” for another.

Subspecialty Fellows Planning for their 2020 ABOG General Oral Board Exam

You can now sit for your general oral boards anytime during your fellowship. Unfortunately, it’s true -if you don’t use it, you lose it, so try to con your fellowship director into letting you take your exam in your first year. If you neglected to collect cases in your off specialty from your chief year, begin to piecemeal how to gather those cases from your residency institution. GYN Oncologists, REI and Urogynecologists will need an OB list and MFMs need a GYN list. If you currently have to take call for these off services, you can use those cases. If you are retrospectively collecting cases, go with your comfort zone. Dang, how could you have forgotten so much in such a short time? Go with the bread-and-butter cases. Remember this is your general boards. We recommend you chose those cases that reflect high-yield topics. Our Test Topics Manual and Pass Your Oral Ob/Gyn Board Exam by Dr. Das are excellent step-by-step guides.  Our review course is ideal for sub-specialists. It’s too risky to wait until a few months before your exam, so come to our March 31- April 5 Board Review Course. For the past five years, we’ve covered 99% of exam topics! We’ll spoon feed you on your off-specialty topics and you will not need to go beyond your course binder.

For AOBOG & ABOG 2020 WRITTEN Exam Candidates

The ABOG June 26th, 2020 exam is now closed. Have you reserved your Pearson-Vue testing center yet? The AOBOG April 13-18, 2020 exam application is due February 28th (March 29th if you want to pay a penalty late fee). The exam is in four and six months, so it’s “over the hump” time. Your free time to study will be usurped by end of year stuff as you finish your residency. Therefore, you must take advantage of JANUARY and FEBRUARY to “kick butt” and crank out a bunch of topics on your study plan. You must be candid as to what you can/cannot accomplish on your study plan. If you haven’t already finished, prioritize those MUST KNOW topics. Our Test Topics Manual is a great resource to show you the way, as it covers 90% of the exam topics.  Limit yourself to a clinical review and don’t forget to budget time for written questions on each topic. We strongly advise taking a review course; our next course is April 1-5, 2020. Obviously, we’re a bit biased, as we feel we have the ideal course; however, you should look for the following features. There is precious little time to wade through the volumes of material to figure out what to prioritize. You also want a faculty with extensive speaking experience. The fact that they research and publish is irrelevant, as their lectures should be based on ACOG clinical guidelines. The faculty especially needs to be knowledgeable in written exams. Every ABC lecture concludes with written questions. For those who have traditionally struggled with written exams, or if you have failed the written board exam, you cannot continue with modus operandi. It didn’t work before, so why set yourself up for the same outcome? We have found that knowledge is rarely the problem. You couldn’t have made it this far is that was the case. It’s typically a processing problem. Our Test Taking Skills Online Course teaches you the CQRPE methodology of test taking.

Test Taking Technique

Need Category I CME hours?  We go through a rigorous application process each year to provide AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ hours to our course registrants.  In addition, our review courses are great for the busy practitioner who is interested in the latest guidelines and clinical pearls.

 ABOG set a precedent in 2010 by not relinquishing the score, so candidates received just a pass or fail grade. This is unfortunate, as one didn’t know if they missed passing by one point or twenty points. Obviously, this would greatly influence one’s strategy for the next go around.

Thus, the only parameter to gauge or predict Board exam performance is the CREOG in-service-training exam. Until now, there has been no incentive to track their correlation, especially since the questions aren’t the most representative in the format like those on your board exam.

However, now you MUST take them seriously, especially if you are a Chief Resident. They are at the end of this month. The best way to test your stamina for the six-hour CREOGs is with our Practice Test. We suggest NLT 2 weeks before the exam.

Unfortunately, you don’t get your CREOG results until March, but they may be the perfect reality check to motivate you to get crack in’. Check your past scores. The magic # is > 200.

AOBOG 2020 ORAL Exam Candidates

Applications for the April 24-25, 2020 oral exam is due by January 20th and remember to include the $3275 examination fee. AOBOG just put on their website that they only have 1 opening left – ASSUME THIS IS OLD STUFF

NEW Since your April exam is just weeks away, consider coming to our April 1-5 course as a final review.  Besides a review of AOBOG core topics, the interactive sessions will cover structured cases, the 4th Station and an OMT refresher.  You will leave feeling fully prepared to walk into your exam.  Unable able to attend or want to start right now?  Our Home Study Packages were designed just for the AOBOG oral exam candidate.  You will receive unlimited access to our course recordings along with strategy videos, and then as you get closer to your exam, we will schedule one-on-one mock oral practice with our DO faculty.

Launch your studying with our April 1-5 Board Review Course. Did you know our syllabus even highlights the core topics? We also have an evening session where we put each core topic under the microscope and look at every angle of possible questions.

Test Taking Technique

Need Category I CME hours?  We go through a rigorous application process each year to provide AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ hours to our course registrants.  In addition, our review courses are great for the busy practitioner who is interested in the latest guidelines and clinical pearls.

 Remember this is an oral exam, so you must practice articulating out loud. Our Structured Cases eerily simulates the exam topics and setting. They not only give you the format but more importantly, the answers, so you can learn the expected depth and breadth of your answers. They are so easy to conduct, and your mock oral examiner doesn’t even need medical knowledge. We advise against using your mother as an examiner because once she learns the format, she’ll be torturing you all the time with her offers to “help.”

ABOG Maintenance of Certification (MOC)

Part II: Lifelong Learning It’s time to pay to play. Your renewal fee of $275 for Part II for Annual Board Certification is due with your application.  You must apply every year and access to the MOC assignments will not be allowed until your application and fee are received. The list of journal articles for the first quarter should be out mid-January. Make a New Year’s resolution to finish the first quarter just before you file your taxes in April.

Part III: Secure Written Exam For those of you in MOC Year 6, you must have had to answer at least 86% or more of the Lifelong Learning questions correctly in MOC Years 1-5 of this MOC cycle.  If you didn’t pass then you will have to take a written exam by December 16th, 2020 If you are sitting for this exam consider coming to our live  April 1-5  course in Charlotte, NC. Since you are an adult learner, we strongly recommend you take your exam the DAY AFTER or at the latest, one week after the course!

Test Taking Tip

Need Category I CME hours?  We go through a rigorous application process each year to provide AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ hours to our course registrants.  In addition, our review courses are great for the busy practitioner who is interested in the latest guidelines and clinical pearls.

RELAX, the test is only 100 questions and you answer two books of fifty questions.

Generalists get to choose their books or “selectives” for each exam. Subspecialists must take the first book based upon their designated subspecialty. They then have to choose a second book from the generalist’s selectives

   Generalists: Selective Exam A & B (50 questions)

  1. Obstetrics and Gynecology and Office Practice & Women’s Health
  2. Obstetrics only
  3. Gynecology only
  4. Office Practice and Women’s Health only

  Subspecialists: Selective Exam A (50 questions)

  1. Gynecologic Oncology
  2. Maternal Fetal Medicine
  3. Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility
  4. Female Pelvic Medicine & Reconstructive Surgery (starting 2019)

The strategy is in choosing your selectives. The Board gives an itemization of the exam topics. Believe it or not, but it is the same list for the primary written exam and the oral exam case list categories, although the focus, fortunately, is much more clinical. It is well worth going to the Basic Bulletin at abog.org to look through the specific list. The focus for each of the General Selectives is as follows:

Obstetrics – Antepartum, Intrapartum, Postpartum. Gynecology only- Inpatient & Outpatient GYN focus, including REI, Urogyn, and Oncology Office Practice and Women’s Health only - primary care, office GYN, office surgery & family planning focus

Each Selective can include “Cross Content Areas” such as:

  1. Safety
  2. Anatomy & Physiology, Basic Sciences
  3. Genetics
  4. Ethics & Professionalism

AOBOG Written Exam Osteopathic Continuous Certification in Obstetrics & Gynecology (OCC)

New this year, AOBOG has launched the Advanced Real-time Certification (ARC) program. This program was designed to help fulfill the OCC Component 3 requirements more conveniently over time instead of the recertification exam every 6 years. Visit the AOBOG website for more information on how to register for this new program.

Consider attending our live review course April 1-5 in Charlotte, NC, Our 5 days together is designed to give you the most up to date information on high yield topics. An added bonus is that you also receive AMA Category 1 credits.

Test Taking Technique

Need Category I CME hours?  We go through a rigorous application process each year to provide AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ hours to our course registrants.  In addition, our review courses are great for the busy practitioner who is interested in the latest guidelines and clinical pearls.

If you’ve never taken an exam on the computer, it’s “different” than on paper. Don’t risk your first time to test drive this new format the day of your exam. We strongly urge you to practice first with our computerized questions. On the AOBOG website, aobog.org, they even give you a list of test topics! They include, but are not limited to, the following:

AOBOG lists exam topics which may include, but are not limited to, the following:

Medical conditions complicating pregnancy

Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy

Diabetes mellitus in pregnancy: screening and management

Ectopic pregnancy: diagnosis and management

Maternal antenatal screening for aneuploidy

HIV in pregnancy

Infectious disease in pregnancy: maternal and fetal effects/complications

Sexually transmitted infections

Labor management

Preterm labor: diagnosis and management including appropriate use of fetal fibronectin, cervical lengths, and antenatal steroids

HPV: infection, manifestations, vaccine

Abnormal cervical cytology and histology: diagnosis & management

Gynecologic procedures: indications, complications, peri-operative management

Menopause management

Low bone mass/osteoporosis: screening, prevention, management

BRCa 1&2: counseling and implications

Urinary incontinence

Abnormal uterine bleeding

Contraception

Pelvic pain

Endometriosis

Vaginitis 

Osteopathic Principles may be incorporated into any of the above areas.

Royal Canadian College 2020 Exam Candidates

The registration deadline for the spring specialty examination is January 13, 2020. The cost for the 2020 examination is 4,415$ CAD.  The registration form can be found online and faxed to 613-730-3707 or emailed to candidates@royalcollege.ca. The Credential Unit will confirm your registration by email. If you do not receive your confirmation within 15 days, you can call 613-730-6278; toll-free 1-800-668-3740 ext. 278 or 419. Depending on your University and Program of training, by the end of January, you can take the CREOG (American) practice examination. Take this seriously as it may help you identify an area of weakness. This examination might (or might not) be paid by your program. If you need to pay, registration is usually due by November.

Test Taking Tips

Need Category I CME hours?  We go through a rigorous application process each year to provide AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ hours to our course registrants.  In addition, our review courses are great for the busy practitioner who is interested in the latest guidelines and clinical pearls.

For the MCQ portion of your exam, the ABC Written Question Manuals are a great source. They cover OB, REI, Oncology, FPM, GYN and Office Practice. Also, the ABC WQMs now include one-liners so you can kill two birds with one stone.

ABOG MFM 2020 ORAL Exam Candidates

Happy New Year, MFM oral exam candidates! It is 2020 and time to keep up the pace of your study plan. Your case list is due to ABOG on February 3rd, which happens to be the first day of the SMFM Annual Meeting so plan ahead! You’ve come too far to have this all go wrong just because of timing! Note: Paper Case List is NOT Acceptable. Don’t forget, there will be an opportunity for face to face mock orals during the SMFM Annual Meeting in Grapevine, TX; it’s February 3rd – 8th.  Don’t let procrastination on studying get the best of you. Make one of your New Year’s resolutions a consistent plan for studying and reading to prepare for April. We have got three more products to assist you in your exam preparation.  Dr. Stephanie Martin just completed the 3rd set of MFM Structured Cases, so you can now practice with another set of 18 or buy all three sets (54 cases) and save.  Now taking preorders for the new MFM FAQ Manual, this manual provides a checklist approach to your MFM oral exam. The line of questioning for both the case list and structured cases is very predictable. These Frequently Asked Questions are organized by topic. This is a great tool to guide or cross-reference your studying. Finally, our 12 session MFM Oral Exam Webinar starts in mid-February, perfect timing to practice your articulation with our faculty.  Each session will be case-based with plenty of opportunities to defend your own cases.  Don't be taken by surprise on your exam!  You’ve got this! 

FPMRS 2020 ORAL Exam Candidates

Happy New Year! We are kicking off the new year with our 12-session Oral Exam Webinar for FPMRS oral exam candidates.  The first session starts Thursday, Feb 20th   with Dr. Adelowo reviewing POP structured cases on surgical materials and mesh complications. Dr. Adelowo is the FPMRS Course director. He is also the Director of FPMRS at Reliant Medical Group and an assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Massachusetts medical school.   Remember your case list is due to ABOG on February 1st. Case list submission recently changed to an online electronic format. You will now need to use the Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery case list form which you can access on your ABOG personal page.  Your case list must be in the proper format and with the required number of cases.  Note: Paper Case List is NOT Acceptable.  You’ve come too far to have this all go wrong just because of timing! We have FPM faculty on hand to review your case list.  They will review it with a keen eye and point out strengths and weaknesses like repetitive language, inconsistencies, or lack of detail that you may fail to recognize since you’re likely working on a document that has been revised multiple times by this point. You will then have a one-on-one phone consult to review the highlights. Don’t pass up on this opportunity. Having a well-constructed full proof case list is a critical part of your exam success. 

Back to blog

Leave a comment

Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.