BMC Medical Education (Apr 2024)

Improving the ability to discriminate medical multiple-choice questions through the analysis of the competitive examination to assign residency positions in Spain

  • Eduardo Murias Quintana,
  • José Rodríguez Castro,
  • Fernando Sánchez Lasheras,
  • Juan Vega Villar,
  • Jose Juan Curbelo García,
  • María Cadenas Rodríguez,
  • Jaime Baladrón Romero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-024-05324-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction Psychometrics plays a vital role in evaluating educational research, including the analysis of multiple-choice exams. This study aims to improve the discriminatory ability of the “Médico Interno Residente” (MIR) medical exam in Spain, used to rank candidates for specialized healthcare training, through psychometric analysis. Methods We analyzed 2,890 MIR exam questions from 2009 to 2021 (totaling 147,214 exams), categorizing them based on methodology and response type. Evaluation employed classical test theory and item response theory (IRT). Classical test theory determined difficulty and discrimination indices, while IRT assessed the relationship between knowledge levels and question performance. Results Question distribution varied across categories and years. Frequently addressed knowledge areas included various medical specialties. Non-image-associated clinical cases were the easiest, while case-based clinical questions exhibited the highest discriminatory capacity, differing significantly from image-based case or negative questions. High-quality questions without images had longer stems but shorter answer choices. Adding images reduced discriminatory power and question difficulty, with image-based questions being easier. Clinical cases with images had shorter stems and longer answer choices. Conclusions For improved exam performance, we recommend using a clinical case format followed by direct short-answer questions. Questions should be of low difficulty, providing clear and specific answers based on scientific evidence and avoiding ambiguity. Typical clinical cases with key characteristic features should be presented, excluding uncertain boundaries of medical knowledge. Questions should have lengthy stems and concise answer choices, minimizing speculation. If images are used, they should be typical, clear, consistent with the exam, and presented within clinical cases using clinical semiotics and propaedeutics.