脊柱外科研究员临床表现的相关因素:我们能否预测成功?

IF 2.6 2区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons Pub Date : 2024-09-15 Epub Date: 2024-07-12 DOI:10.5435/JAAOS-D-24-00120
Hannah A Levy, Payton Boere, Zane Randell, John Bodnar, John Paulik, Nicholas T Spina, William R Spiker, Brandon D Lawrence, Darrel S Brodke, Mark F Kurd, Jeffrey A Rihn, Jose A Canseco, Gregory D Schroeder, Christopher K Kepler, Alexander R Vaccaro, Bradford Currier, Paul M Huddleston, Ahmad N Nassr, Brett A Freedman, Arjun S Sebastian, Alan S Hilibrand, Brian A Karamian
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:脊柱研究员匹配中最重要的因素可能与研究期间的表现质量并无最终关联。本研究考察了与高申请排名相关的脊柱研究员申请指标,以及与研究期间最强临床表现相关的指标:从旧金山匹配数据库(2021 年首次可用)中检索了三所学术机构的脊柱研究员申请,并对申请进行了去身份化审查。提取了与研究、学术、教育、课外活动、领导力、考试、职业兴趣和推荐信有关的申请指标。参与所在机构脊柱研究员遴选工作的脊柱外科主治医师收到了一份调查问卷,调查内容包括:(1) 根据申请者的候选资格对其进行排名;(2) 根据其前任研究员的表现对其进行排名。皮尔逊相关性评估了申请指标与研究员理论排名和实际表现之间的关联:共有 37 份脊柱研究员申请(机构 A:15 份;机构 B:12 份;机构 C:10 份),由 14 名脊柱外科医生评分(机构 A:6 份;机构 B:4 份;机构 C:4 份)。理论研究员排名与总体研究、住院医师培训项目排名、推荐作者 H 指数、美国医学执照考试 (USMLE) 分数和期刊审稿人职位呈中度正相关。研究员的实际表现与住院医师培训项目排名、推荐人 H 指数、USMLE 分数和期刊审稿人职位呈中度正相关。线性回归结果表明,期刊审稿人职位(ß = 1.73,P = 0.002)、步骤 1(ß = 0.09,P = 0.010)和步骤 3(ß = 0.10,P = 0.002)分数、推荐作者 H 指数(ß = 0.06,P = 0.029,ß = 0.07,P = 0.006)和总体研究(ß = 0.01,P = 0.005)是理论排名的预测因素。推荐作家H指数(ß = 0.21,P = 0.030)和Alpha Omega Alpha成就(ß = 6.88,P = 0.021)可预测实际表现:结论:住院医师培训项目的声誉、USMLE成绩和知名脊柱外科医生的推荐对申请审核和研究期间的表现都很重要。研究生产率虽然在申请审核中很重要,但并不能预测研究员的表现:III.研究设计:队列研究研究设计:队列研究。
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Factors Related to Clinical Performance in Spine Surgery Fellowship: Can We Predict Success.

Introduction: The factors most important in the spine fellowship match may not ultimately correlate with quality of performance during fellowship. This study examined the spine fellow applicant metrics correlated with high application rank compared with the metrics associated with the strongest clinical performance during fellowship.

Methods: Spine fellow applications at three academic institutions were retrieved from the San Francisco Match database (first available to 2021) and deidentified for application review. Application metrics pertaining to research, academics, education, extracurriculars, leadership, examinations, career interests, and letter of recommendations were extracted. Attending spine surgeons involved in spine fellow selection at their institutions were sent a survey to rank (1) fellow applicants based on their perceived candidacy and (2) the strength of performance of their previous fellows. Pearson correlation assessed the associations of application metrics with theoretical fellow rank and actual performance.

Results: A total of 37 spine fellow applications were included (Institution A: 15, Institution B: 12, Institution C: 10), rated by 14 spine surgeons (Institution A: 6, Institution B: 4, Institution C: 4). Theoretical fellow rank demonstrated a moderate positive association with overall research, residency program rank, recommendation writer H-index, US Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) scores, and journal reviewer positions. Actual fellow performance demonstrated a moderate positive association with residency program rank, recommendation writer H-index, USMLE scores, and journal reviewer positions. Linear regressions identified journal reviewer positions (ß = 1.73, P = 0.002), Step 1 (ß = 0.09, P = 0.010) and Step 3 (ß = 0.10, P = 0.002) scores, recommendation writer H-index (ß = 0.06, P = 0.029, and ß = 0.07, P = 0.006), and overall research (ß = 0.01, P = 0.005) as predictors of theoretical rank. Recommendation writer H-index (ß = 0.21, P = 0.030) and Alpha Omega Alpha achievement (ß = 6.88, P = 0.021) predicted actual performance.

Conclusion: Residency program reputation, USMLE scores, and a recommendation from an established spine surgeon were important in application review and performance during fellowship. Research productivity, although important during application review, was not predictive of fellow performance.

Level of evidence: III.

Study design: Cohort Study.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
529
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons was established in the fall of 1993 by the Academy in response to its membership’s demand for a clinical review journal. Two issues were published the first year, followed by six issues yearly from 1994 through 2004. In September 2005, JAAOS began publishing monthly issues. Each issue includes richly illustrated peer-reviewed articles focused on clinical diagnosis and management. Special features in each issue provide commentary on developments in pharmacotherapeutics, materials and techniques, and computer applications.
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