Press releases Monday 15 February to Friday 19 February 2010
Please remember to credit the BMJas source when publicising an article and to tell your readers that they can
read its full text on the journal's website (http://www.bmj.com).
(1) New aptitude test for medical schools less subject to bias than A level results alone
(2) Warning over contamination of heroin with anthrax spores in Scotland
(1) New aptitude test for medical schools less subject to bias than A level results alone
(Research: Comparison of A level and UKCAT performance in students applying to UK medical and dental schools in 2006: cohort study)
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/doi/10.1136/bmj.c478
(Editorial: Improving the selection of medical students)
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/doi/10.1136/bmj.c708
A new aptitude test, aimed at increasing diversity and fairness in selecting school leaver applicants to UK medical and dental schools, still has inherent gender and socioeconomic bias, although it is less subject to bias than A level results alone, finds a study published on bmj.com today.
Selection to highly competitive UK degree courses such as medicine and dentistry needs to be appropriate, fair and transparent. Unfortunately, the validity and reliability of many current selection practices is questionable. With A level grade inflation, discriminating between large numbers of highly able applicants on their academic achievement alone is increasingly difficult, and participation needs to be widened.
These concerns led to the development of the UK Clinical Aptitude Test (UKCAT) which was first used in 2006 as part of the admissions process by a consortium of 23 medical and dental schools.
The test is an appraisal of skills such as verbal reasoning and decision analysis, and is designed to ensure that candidates have the most appropriate mental abilities, attitudes and professional behaviours for new doctors and dentists to be successful in their professional careers.
To determine whether this test provides a more equitable assessment of aptitude, Professor David James and colleagues analysed data from the first group of applicants who sat the UKCAT in 2006 and who achieved at least three passes at A level in their school leaving examinations.
They found a modest correlation between A level and UKCAT scores, which confirms that the test can be used as a reasonable proxy for A levels in the selection process.
However, the test had an inherent favourable bias to male applicants and those from a higher socioeconomic class or from independent or grammar schools.
These findings lead us to be cautious about use of the UKCAT and the value of any one specific sub-test within an admissions policy, conclude the authors. They also reinforce the need for further research to clarify the practical value of the UKCAT in a wider range of applicants and, importantly, its predictive role in performance at medial or dental school.
Measuring cognitive ability is a step in the right direction, but it doesn't tackle "widening participation" - the admission of people from lower socioeconomic groups or those whose education has been compromised by attending poorer schools, writes Professor David Powis from the University of Newcastle in Australia, in an accompanying editorial.
And neither does UKCAT yet provide selectors with information on the non-cognitive characteristics and personal qualities that are fundamentally essential (and those that are undesirable) in the generic good doctor, he adds. This challenge remains for the future.
Contacts:
Research:David James, Foundation Director of Medical Education, University of Nottingham Medical School, Queen’s Medical Centre, Nottingham, UK
Email: david.james@nottingham.ac.uk
Editorial:David Powis, School of Psychology, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, Australia
Email: david.powis@newcastle.edu.au
(2) Warning over contamination of heroin with anthrax spores in Scotland
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/doi/10.1136/bmj.c889
Contamination of heroin with anthrax spores in Scotland has led to an outbreak of anthrax infection in heroin users and has resulted in several deaths, warn three senior doctors in this week's BMJ.
They describe the case of a drug user who presented to the emergency department at Crosshouse Hospital in Kilmarnock eight hours after he administered an injection of heroin into his forearm.
The patient displayed signs of sepsis and had an expanding, hard, swollen lesion at the injection site that was blistered but was not tender. After radical debridement (removal of dead tissue) and antibiotic treatment, further investigation identified the anthrax bacterium (Bacillus anthracis).
The authors warn that "the ongoing outbreak of anthrax infection in heroin users in Scotland, probably from contamination of heroin with anthrax spores, has resulted in several deaths."
Contact:
James Stevenson, Consultant, Emergency Department, Crosshouse Hospital, Kilmarnock, Ayrshire, Scotland
Email james.stephenson@aaaht.scot.nhs.uk
For more information please contact:
Emma Dickinson
Tel: +44 (0)20 7383 6529
Email: edickinson@bma.org.uk
Press Office telephone : 020 7383 6254 (Weekdays : 0900hrs - 1800hrs)
British Medical Association
BMA House, Tavistock Square, London WC1H 9JP
and from:
the EurekAlert website, run by the
American Association for the Advancement of Science (http://www.eurekalert.org)
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