The Royal College of General Practitioners replies to the BMJ
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A suggestion of racial discrimination in a professional licensing examination is a serious matter.1 We are surprised to see it in the paper in the BMJ by Esmail and Roberts2 when the corresponding GMC report using the same data explicitly states that the same authors found no bias in the clinical skills assessment (CSA) of the examination for membership of the Royal College of General Practitioners (MRCGP).3 It is misleading at best to suggest that discrimination in the CSA is the cause of differential pass rates when the paper presents no such evidence.
Table 1 shows that black and minority ethnic (BME) candidates who are international medical graduates (IMG) and/or from the European Economic Area (EEA) also seem to do less well than white IMG/EEA candidates in the GMC’s Professional and Linguistic Assessment Board (PLAB) part 2 examination. …
[1] P. Dowling. Discrimination in the UK’s postgraduate examination in primary care , 2013, BMJ : British Medical Journal.
[2] Z. Kmietowicz. Study raises concerns over racial discrimination in MRCGP exam , 2013, BMJ : British Medical Journal.
[3] A. Esmail,et al. Academic performance of ethnic minority candidates and discrimination in the MRCGP examinations between 2010 and 2012: analysis of data , 2013, BMJ : British Medical Journal.