Perspectives on Application and Interview Capping in Residency Selection of Surgical Subspecialties.

Journal of surgical education Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-16 DOI:10.1016/j.jsurg.2024.04.007
Shwetha Mudalegundi, Marisa Clifton, Scott Lifchez, Dawn LaPorte, Saras Ramanathan, Ahmed H Sabit, Fasika Woreta
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Abstract

Objective: With the advent of virtual interviews, the potential for interview hoarding by applicants became of greater concern due to lack of financial constraints associated with in-person interviewing. Simultaneously, the average number of applications submitted each year is rising. Currently there is no cap to the number of applications or interviews an applicant may complete when applying to residency, with the exception of ophthalmology with a cap of 15 interviews. No studies have assessed the applicants' perspectives on an application or interview cap. We assessed the attitudes of surgical subspecialty applicants towards capping, which may be useful when considering innovations in residency selection.

Design/setting/participants: About 1841 applicants to the Johns Hopkins' ophthalmology, urology, plastic surgery, and orthopedic surgery residency programs from the 2022-2023 cycle were invited to respond to a 22-item questionnaire. Statistical analyses of aggregate data were conducted using R.

Results: Of the 776/1841 (42%) responses, 288 (40%) were in support of an application cap, while 455 (63%) were in support of an interview cap. Specialty (p < 0.001), gender (p < 0.001), taking a gap year (p = 0.02), medical school region (p = 0.04), and number of interviews accepted off of a waitlist (p = 0.01) were all significantly associated with a difference in opinion regarding an application cap. Specialty (p < 0.001), USMLE Step 1 score (p = 0.004), number of interviews (p < 0.001), and number of programs ranked (p < 0.001) were all significantly associated with a difference in opinion regarding an interview cap. Of those applicants who were in support of the respective caps they believed that on average a cap should consist of 48.1 (16.1) applications and 16.0 (8.0) interviews.

Conclusions: Our findings highlight the desire for interview caps among the majority of applicants to surgical subspecialties and thus this innovation may be considered by other specialties in the era of virtual interviews.

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关于外科亚专科住院医师遴选中申请和面试上限的观点。
目的:随着虚拟面试的出现,由于缺乏与面对面面试相关的财务限制,申请人囤积面试资料的可能性变得更加令人担忧。与此同时,每年提交的平均申请数量也在增加。目前,除了眼科的面试上限为 15 次外,申请住院医师培训时,申请人可完成的申请或面试次数没有上限。目前还没有研究对申请者对申请或面试上限的看法进行评估。我们评估了外科亚专科申请者对上限的态度,这可能有助于考虑住院医师遴选的创新:约翰霍普金斯大学眼科、泌尿科、整形外科和骨科住院医师培训项目2022-2023年周期的约1841名申请人受邀回答了一份包含22个项目的调查问卷。使用R.R.对汇总数据进行了统计分析:在776/1841(42%)份回复中,288(40%)份支持申请上限,455(63%)份支持面试上限。专业(p < 0.001)、性别(p < 0.001)、休学一年(p = 0.02)、医学院所在地区(p = 0.04)和从候补名单中接受面试的次数(p = 0.01)都与申请上限的意见差异有显著关联。专业 (p < 0.001)、USMLE 第 1 步分数 (p = 0.004)、面试次数 (p < 0.001) 和排名靠前的专业数量 (p < 0.001) 都与对面试上限的意见差异有显著关联。在支持相应上限的申请人中,他们认为平均上限应包括 48.1 (16.1) 份申请和 16.0 (8.0) 次面试:我们的研究结果表明,大多数外科亚专科的申请人都希望设置面试上限,因此在虚拟面试时代,其他专科也可以考虑这一创新。
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Perspectives on Application and Interview Capping in Residency Selection of Surgical Subspecialties. Exploring Medical Students' Perceptions of Peer-to-Peer Interactions Related to Applying to a Surgical Residency. Development of a Competency Framework Defining Effective Surgical Educators. Self-Assessment Versus Peer-Assessment in Microsurgery Learning: A Comparative Retrospective Study in a Surgery Residents Cohort. New Heuristics to Stratify Applicants: Predictors of General Surgery Residency Applicant Step 1 Scores.
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