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What To Do If You Fail Your Board Exam - The Pass Machine

VIDEO: What to Do if You Fail Your Board Exam

April 11, 2019 by Jack Krasuski, MD 5 Comments Categories: All Posts, Board Exam Tags: board exam failure, Coping Strategies for Failing a Board Exam, coping with failing my boards, coping with failure, dr jack krasuski, how to cope with failing a board exam, i failed my board exam, jack krasuski, the pass machine, what to do when i fail

Last updated on May 2nd, 2024

What Do You Do If You Fail Your Medical Board Exam?

Well, the first thing you should do if you fail your board exam is to take some time to come to terms with what has happened.  When you first open up that envelope and you see that you failed the exam, it will hit you like a ton of bricks. You don’t need to do anything. You do not need to start studying. Just take it easy, sleep on it. Give yourself a few days, a week or two. Your next exam is six months to a year away.  After a while you will see that no one will love you any less because you failed the exam or that failing the exam will not materially hurt your career. It doesn’t seem that way in the short term, but after you have a few days of perspective, I think you will be ready to move forward.

Be Easy on Yourself

The second thing to do is not beat yourself up. Sometimes it’s easy to just want to be angry at oneself. But if you are beating  yourself up, that means you are getting beaten up, and you can’t afford to be beaten up because you are your own resource. You have to do well. You have to be in good shape in order to go forward, to conquer this exam. Then when you’re ready, assess what went wrong and where you can make changes.  For example, if you ran out of time, although not very common, going forward in your studies for the next exam you should take a lot of practice tests and time your pacing. Most exams have about a minute per question. If you’re off that pace, then you could practice speeding up. Take note of which type of questions really slow you down. There are a lot of questions on exams where you will not be certain about the answers. Some individuals have a hard time with that uncertainty and they almost freeze up. Pay attention to that. You’re going to have to, in a way, desensitize that feeling because the time is ticking, and you need to move onto the next question. You’re just going to have to take your best guess and move on. Also, as you’re taking your practice tests, you can practice to speed things up if you need to. If you didn’t do well, but you took a very short amount of time, maybe you would do better if took some more time and slowed down. Maybe you were rushing through reading the question and you never fully understood what you were being asked.

Think About Your Exam Performance Report and Plan When You’ll Retake the Board Exams

Next, go ahead and review your exam performance report. I want to give you a tip that may seem counter-intuitive. On every exam, there are a certain number of topics, maybe 4, 6, or 7 at the most, that are very large topics, close to 10%, sometimes over 10% of the exam. For example, on the internal medicine exam, cardiovascular disease is 14% of the entire exam. ID, gastroenterology, and pulmonology are also large topics. So even if you passed that big section, there are still a large number of questions that you got wrong, just because the percentage is so high. The total number of questions in that section is so high that even if you pass, the number of wrong questions is still substantial. Also, on every exam there are going to be a dozen or maybe two dozen topics that have very few questions associated with them. For example, on psychiatry, sleep disorders, it’s 2% of the exam. There might be 3, 4, or maybe 5 questions at most. But sleep disorders, there are many of them, and they’re pretty complicated. It could take a long time to really master that area that really has very few practice questions associated with it. It makes more sense to focus on the big topic areas even if you passed them. If you did not pass them, then that’s a no brainer.  That’s really where you need to spend the time.

Now, there’s one last thing I wanted to talk with you about if you fail your board exam. I want to say this gently. I don’t want you to throw rotten tomatoes at my head.  I don’t want to upset you, but this is what I want to say.  Sometimes there is a silver lining to failing an exam.  As physicians we are all high performers in medical school. We’ve all worked hard, spent hours and hours, years, decades, studying.  Some of us don’t really have a history of failing much of anything. Then when we fail something, like a board exam, we can take it hard, really, really hard. It may undermine our self-concept, our sense of self and who we are. That sounds pretty negative, but there is a silver lining there because we are more than passing or failing an exam. Maybe it’s time to really rethink about what makes us who we are. If we’ve never failed, then maybe we’re not taking enough risks in our life.  Failure has to be part of the things that we do. If we’re always passing everything, succeeding at everything, maybe we are playing it just a little bit too safe.

In my own case, in psychiatry, I’m a psychiatrist. At the time, we had written boards and oral boards, and I took and failed my psychiatry oral boards twice.  I choked.  Lo and behold, it turned out to be one of the best experiences of my life. Not at the time, it felt horrible, but it let me to really understand what I was doing wrong.  I was a junior faculty member at my university, and I started training my residents about how to better interview patients and present cases. Then that led me through a series of steps of starting American Physician Institute, which is now my full-time job. It was my failure that ironically led to my greatest success. If it wasn’t for my failure, I wouldn’t be talking to you right now in this capacity. Again, I don’t want to stress this too much. You may not be ready to hear this. But I do think it is an important part of the message to share with you.

In any case, if there’s anything I can do to help, certainly reach out to me DrJack@AmericanPhysician.com.  Take care of yourself.

Signing off,

It’s Dr. Jack.  Thank you.

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Filed Under: All Posts, Board Exam Tagged With: board exam failure, Coping Strategies for Failing a Board Exam, coping with failing my boards, coping with failure, dr jack krasuski, how to cope with failing a board exam, i failed my board exam, jack krasuski, the pass machine, what to do when i fail

Comments

  1. Laura Lewallen says

    April 21, 2019 at 1:57 pm

    Great advice. I am recertifying, is there a limited number of times I am allowed to retake the ABIM, would I be required to retrain if I failed more than once? Where can I find this in writing?

    Thanks,
    Linda

    Reply
    • Jack Krasuski says

      April 24, 2019 at 9:18 am

      Hi Linda,

      According to the ABIM website “Physicians who are unsuccessful on the 10-year MOC exam can re-take the exam during any future exam administration. There is no restriction on the total number of opportunities for re-examination.” You can find that information in writing here: https://www.abim.org/maintenance-of-certification/policies-fees/policies.aspx under the “Re-examination for traditional MOC exam” section.

      Thank you for your kind words and for reading this blog post on What to do if you fail your board exam.

      Reply
  2. Becky says

    April 19, 2021 at 9:40 am

    Is that also true of the Family Medicine Boards?

    Reply
    • Jack Krasuski says

      April 19, 2021 at 11:35 am

      Hi Becky,

      Yes, this advice on how to handle failing your board exam would apply to any of the boards, including Family Medicine.

      If you have any other questions please don’t hesitate to reach out to us.

      Warm regards,
      Dr. Jack

      Reply
  3. Kristen says

    May 4, 2021 at 3:00 pm

    Thank you for sharing this. Our son has done well in residency. His patients and peers often tell him he is an excellent physician, and he loves working in clinic. He has always struggled with standardized exams. He found out today he failed his first board exam. I believe it is terribly important that doctors hear words like yours, especially from their professional peers. I am certain he isn’t alone in feeling the sting of disappointment. As a doctor’s mom, I hope any resident in a similar position reading your post will remember what a tremendous gift they are to their patients. An exam like this is merely one more step required in the long series of challenges they have already met. Plenty of exceptional people have overcome such obstacles. Good luck and kudos to those who have dedicated themselves to becoming physicians! You are much needed and admired.

    Reply

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