Realistic illustration of shocked medical students and CFM president reacting to Enamed results revealing poor performance in one-third of Brazil's medical courses.
Realistic illustration of shocked medical students and CFM president reacting to Enamed results revealing poor performance in one-third of Brazil's medical courses.
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Enamed results show poor performance in one-third of medical courses

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The Ministry of Education released on Monday (19) the results of the first Enamed edition, an exam assessing medical training in Brazil. About one-third of evaluated courses received low scores, affecting nearly 14,000 graduates. The CFM president called the outcome 'alarming'.

The Enamed, a national exam mandatory for final-year medical students, was administered for the first time in 2025, with results released on January 19, 2026. Of the 351 evaluated courses, 107 received concepts 1 or 2 on a scale of 1 to 5, meaning fewer than 60% of graduates achieved minimum proficiency. These courses belong to 97 institutions, mostly private, concentrated in the Southeast, Northeast, and Central-West regions.

Nearly 14,000 graduates—precisely 13,871—emerged from low-scoring institutions, according to the Federal Council of Medicine (CFM). CFM President José Hiran Gallo stated: "These are 13,871 medical graduates who will receive diplomas and licenses to serve the population without having minimal competencies to practice medicine. This is alarming and puts the health and safety of millions of Brazilians at risk."

The Afya educational group, leading in medical school acquisitions since 2018, had 13 of its units with concept 2, such as the Centro Universitário de Araguaína (GO) and Faculdade de Ciências Médicas de Itabuna (BA). In a statement, Afya challenged the results: "The Enamed results were disclosed to institutions in December via the e-MEC system and indicated that 70% of Afya's institutions received scores of 3 to 5." The company claims the data was altered after initially being public.

Other major groups, such as Cogna, Yduqs, Ser Educacional, and Ânima, also appear on the low-score list. Administered by Inep, the exam focuses on clinical, ethical, and social competencies, with 100 questions based on practical SUS cases, emphasizing real scenarios like diabetes diagnoses, surgical emergencies, and public health.

As this is the first edition, sanctions will be gradual: 21 institutions face stricter monitoring, and eight may see suspension of new enrollments. Courses have 30 days for administrative defense. The MEC uses Enamed to regulate medical training quality, which expanded rapidly in the private sector without adequate standards, per the CFM.

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X discussions reveal widespread alarm over Enamed results showing one-third of medical courses, mostly private, with low scores affecting 14,000 graduates. Users criticize profit-driven low-quality training endangering patients and demand sanctions like FIES restrictions and closures. Praise for top public universities like USP achieving maximum scores. Some express outrage at underperforming federal courses warranting intervention. CFM president labels results 'catastrophic' and calls for proficiency exams.

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Students arriving at an Enem 2025 exam center in Brazil, with empty seats inside highlighting the 27% abstention rate on the first day.
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Enem 2025 sees 27% abstention on first day

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The first day of Enem 2025, held on November 9, recorded a 27% abstention rate, similar to 2024. Over 4.8 million students registered, with 3,240 eliminations for irregularities. The essay theme was "Perspectives on aging in Brazilian society".

The Enem reaplication, held on December 16 and 17, 2025, featured at least two questions with logical structures identical to those in study materials attributed to medical student Edcley Teixeira. The Inep released the test booklet on December 23, and Folha identified similarities in math and combinatorics problems. Edcley denies any leak, crediting the matches to analysis of exam patterns.

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The Simce 2025 application for eighth grade faced issues on October 22, when examiners from the company Infer failed to arrive at 146 schools in the Metropolitan Region, suspending the Math and Sciences test. Authorities rescheduled the affected evaluations and will impose sanctions on the provider, while defending the process's validity. The incident affects only 2.4% of national establishments, within usual parameters.

Ethiopia's Deputy Prime Minister Temesgen Tiruneh has called for everyone to take full responsibility in establishing a secure, fair, and impartial exam administration system. In a social media message, he commended the preparatory efforts and progress of the national exam administration.

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Wiper Party leader Kalonzo Musyoka has criticized the new KJSEA assessment system as a confusing mess with no global recognition. Education Minister Julius Migos defended the results, stating they nurture students' talents and ensure all will join secondary school. The debate highlights tensions between opposition and government over Kenya's education policies.

Nearly 900,000 Grade 12 learners who sat for the 2025 National Senior Certificate exams await their results, with Minister Siviwe Gwarube set to reveal the overall outcomes on 12 January 2026. Individual results will become accessible from 13 January via schools, SMS, USSD or the Department of Basic Education website. This guide outlines key dates, access methods and options for those needing re-marks or alternatives.

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An ex ante evaluation by Insper's Center for Evidence in Integral Education, released this week, estimates that the federal Pé-de-Meia program could reduce high school dropout rates but cannot address educational challenges for vulnerable youth on its own. The study, based on 2019 data, recommends adjustments to state programs to complement the scholarship, such as individualized support. The book detailing the results is available for free on Insper's website.

 

 

 

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