The New Zealand Herald

Doctors ‘devastated’ by 6-hour exam fiasco

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Dubby Henry

More than 100 New Zealand doctors must resit the most important exam of their careers after a computer glitch during the six-hour online test.

The written divisional basic training exam is set by the Royal Australasi­an College of Physicians (RACP) and is widely considered the most stressful test doctors ever take.

The RACP said 127 New Zealand doctors and hundreds of Australian doctors sat the test on February 19.

A typical candidate will have studied for 18 months on top of full-time medical work in preparatio­n for the brutal six-hour exam, according to Dr Deborah Powell, national secretary of the NZ Resident Doctors’ Associatio­n.

The news their exam results were void and they had to resit had left Kiwi doctors “absolutely shattered”, she said.

“People are spontaneou­sly bursting into tears — they’re devastated. That was the immediate reaction; there’s a bit of anger there now too.”

This year the exam moved from being paper-based to an online test, run by United States company Pearson Vue.

It was set in two three-hour blocks on Monday. But during the second block, a technical fault locked many candidates out of their computers.

Technician­s scrambled to fix the problem but meanwhile candidates were stuck in exam rooms — some for hours.

Horror stories have emerged of the resulting stress.

Students were not allowed out for food, water or toilet breaks. One Australian candidate was reportedly refused leave to pump breast milk for her baby, meaning he had to drink formula for the first time in his life.

Others had already finished the exam and left early when they were informed the test had been cancelled and their results were void.

On Monday the RACP apologised for the botch-up and distress caused. All candidates must now resit a paper-based exam next Friday.

A video posted to YouTube by the RACP before the test had said there were “a number of different contingenc­y plans” in case of a computer failure during the exam.

That video has now been taken offline — but the RACP told the Herald the video had always been scheduled to come down after the exam.

The paper-based exam had been prepared in advance as part of the risk-management plan, the RACP said.

In Australia, doctors pay A$1800 ($1928)to sit the exam, on top of thousands in training fees. But in New Zealand, district health boards (DHBs) pay the $2093 fee for the exam.

DHBs also give the doctors a two-week sabbatical leading up to the test, with locums covering the gap.

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