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Showing posts with label family practice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family practice. Show all posts

Friday, September 15, 2017

Oppenheim's Rule


Less in high school, more in college, and even more in medical school, students agonized before a test, suffering during, and grumbled afterward about how badly they did.

At some point in life, I had an epiphany. It occurred to me that I was smarter than most people. If a test seemed hard to me, it was certainly harder for everyone else. So I would do fine. When I decided to think this way, a great weight lifted from my shoulders, and I stopped worrying about exams.

As a certified family practitioner, I must take a test every six years to keep my certification. With no office practice, I can’t take the shorter test given to colleagues. It takes three hours; later someone visits the office to evaluate their charts. I must take the same day-long written exam given residents fresh out of training.  It includes subjects I’ve long forgotten such as obstetrics and surgery, so I spend a lot of time guessing. But I did fine in exams I took at the age of 39, 45, 51, and 57. By the time I was 63, the questions seemed harder, and I was guessing more often. For weeks afterward I broke my rule and worried. Failure would be humiliating. Also, I’d have to pay $800 to take the test again. But the rule held. I passed.