Christopher
Forum Deputy Chief
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One of them was a mis click if that matters
For the most part, the ones I missed, I think I rushed through. Half of them were very obvious looking back. The other half... Very,very subtle, so.... I guess there's no middle ground? Haha
I always tell my students when I grade a multiple choice exam that I can't differentiate between a mistaken answer and an incorrect answer, hence we only cover questions that more than 25% of the class missed.
"Subtle" is only because our guidelines for STEMI are not based in reality. Your heart has no idea what a millimeter is (for all we know it still uses English units), so why on earth do we think 1mm+ in 2+ contiguous leads is going to be the end-all-be-all of STEMI identification?
Besides, those criteria were developed in the age of thrombolytics and by "developed" I mean chosen rather arbitrarily as there have not been any trials to determine the optimal cutoffs. You can tell they're not grounded in reality when they have these exceptions like ">1.5mm in V2 and >2mm in V3 for yada yada yada", because they do not account for proportionality or normal variants.
If Tom only got an 83%, I feel slightly better with my score
You can score a respectable 70% and have a horrible number of false positives. Accuracy is not nearly as important as a reasonable sensitivity/specificity, and nowhere near as important as an item-by-item review of what you missed and why.