The impact of interviewer characteristics on residency candidate scores in Emergency Medicine: a brief report.

MedEdPublish (2016) Pub Date : 2024-02-13 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.12688/mep.19735.2
Ryan F Coughlin, Jessica Bod, D Brian Wood, Katja Goldflam, David Della-Giustina, Melissa Joseph, Dylan Devlin, Ambrose H Wong, Alina Tsyrulnik
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Abstract

Background: At the conclusion of residency candidate interview days, faculty interviewers commonly meet as a group to reach conclusions about candidate evaluations based on shared information. These conclusions ultimately translate into rank list position for The Residency Match. The primary objective is to determine if the post-interview discussion influences the final scores assigned by each interviewer, and to investigate whether interviewer characteristics are significantly associated with the likelihood of changing their score. Based on Foucault's 'theory of discourse' and Bourdieu's 'social capital theory,' we hypothesized that interviewer characteristics, and the discourse itself, would contribute to score changes after a post-interview discussion regarding emergency medicine residency candidates.

Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional observational study of candidate scores for all candidates to a four-year emergency medicine residency program affiliated with Yale University School of Medicine during a single application cycle. The magnitude and direction of score changes, if any, after group discussion were plotted and grouped by interviewer academic rank. We created a logistic regression model to determine the odds that candidate scores changed from pre- and post-discussion ratings related to specific interviewer factors.

Results: A total of 24 interviewers and 211 candidates created 471 unique interviewer-candidate scoring interactions, with 216 (45.8%) changing post-discussion. All interviewers ranked junior to professor were significantly more likely to change their score compared to professors. Interviewers who were women had significantly lower odds of changing their individual scores following group discussion (p=0.020; OR 0.49, 95% CI 0.26-0.89).

Conclusions: Interviewers with lower academic rank had higher odds of changing their post-discussion scores of residency candidates compared to professors. Future work is needed to further characterize the influencing factors and could help create more equitable decision processes during the residency candidate ranking process.

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面试官特征对急诊医学专业住院医师候选人分数的影响:简要报告。
背景:在住院医师候选人面试日结束时,教员面试官通常会集体开会,根据共享信息对候选人的评价做出结论。这些结论最终会转化为住院医师匹配的排名表位置。本研究的主要目的是确定面试后的讨论是否会影响每位面试官给出的最终分数,并调查面试官的特征是否与改变分数的可能性有显著关联。根据福柯的 "话语理论 "和布迪厄的 "社会资本理论",我们假设面试官的特点和话语本身将有助于急诊科住院医师候选人面试后讨论后分数的变化:我们对耶鲁大学医学院附属四年制急诊医学住院医师项目的所有候选人在一个申请周期内的得分进行了横断面观察研究。我们绘制了小组讨论后分数变化的幅度和方向(如有),并按面试官的学术级别进行了分组。我们建立了一个逻辑回归模型,以确定候选人分数在讨论前后发生变化的几率与面试官的具体因素有关:共有 24 名面试官和 211 名应聘者参与了 471 次面试官与应聘者之间的评分互动,其中 216 次(45.8%)在讨论后发生了变化。与教授相比,所有从初级到教授级别的面试官都更有可能改变自己的评分。女性面试官在小组讨论后改变个人分数的几率明显较低(P=0.020;OR 0.49,95% CI 0.26-0.89):结论:与教授相比,学术级别较低的面试官在讨论后改变住院医师候选人分数的几率更高。未来的工作需要进一步确定影响因素的特征,这将有助于在住院医师候选人排名过程中建立更公平的决策程序。
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