Jason Silvestre, BS Anthony J. Taglienti, MD Joseph M. Serletti, MD Benjamin Chang, MD
Aesthetic Surgery Journal, Volume 35, Issue 6, 1 August 2015, Pages 739–745
Published: 31 July 2015
Abstract
Background
The Plastic Surgery In-Service Training Exam (PSITE) is a multiple-choice examination taken by plastic surgery trainees to provide an assessment of plastic surgery knowledge.
Objective
The purpose of this study was to evaluate cosmetic questions and determine overlap with national procedural data.
Methods
Digital syllabi of six consecutive PSITE administrations (2008-2013) were analyzed for cosmetic surgery topics. Questions were classified by taxonomy, focus, anatomy, and procedure. Answer references were tabulated by source. Relationships between tested material and national procedural volume were assessed via Pearson correlation.
Results
301 questions addressed cosmetic topics (26% of all questions) and 20 required image interpretations (7%). Question-stem taxonomy favored decision-making (40%) and recall (37%) skills over interpretation (23%, P
Conclusions
Plastic surgeons receive routine evaluation of cosmetic surgery knowledge. These data may help optimize clinical and didactic experiences for training in cosmetic surgery.