Vick Laura R, Borman Karen R
Department of Surgery, University of Mississippi School of Medicine, Jackson, Mississippi, USA.
J Surg Educ. 2008 Nov-Dec;65(6):445-52. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2008.07.003.
To determine whether PGY-1 future fellowship preferences are stable during progression through residency.
Residents who took the American Board of Surgery In-Training Examination (ABSITE) were surveyed about fellowships. Three data files were created: categorical and nondesignated preliminary trainees at all postgraduate years (PGY); categorical PGY-1 and chief residents; and individual categorical residents with paired PGY-1 and PGY-5 responses. Gender was self-reported; residency characteristics were retrieved via program identifier codes. Annual frequency distributions were generated by specialty and for other, any fellowship (AF), and no fellowship (NF).
Categorical plus contains more than 80,000 responses. Undecided leads PGY-1 intentions at all times, which reached 55% by 2007 and decreased near linearly as PGY level advances. The AF rates increase by PGY level in a decelerating curve. The other rates accelerate at PGY-3 and beyond. The NF rates are low for PGY-1 and 2, nearly double from PGY-3 to 4, and double again from PGY-4 to 5. The categorical group contains more than 20,000 residents with their demographics. The undecided group predominates for both genders, but more women were undecided by 2003. Specialty distribution varies with gender; women were overrepresented in oncology, pediatric, plastic, and other. The undecided group leads choices of university and independent PGY-1 residents, with university overrepresentation in all areas except colorectal, plastic, and no fellowship. Small, medium, and large program PGY-1 residents all choose undecided first but diverge thereafter. Over 12,000 paired categorical PGY-1 and PGY-5 responses reveal that most PGY-1 residents (78%) change future specialties by PGY-5. Undecided residents most often choose no fellowship (25%), vascular (12%), or other (12%).
PGY-1 residents are increasingly unsure about future fellowships. PGY-1 preferences are unstable whether examined in groups or as individuals. Gender and residency characteristics are linked to differing selection patterns. PGY-1 residents rarely predict accurately their PGY-5 fellowship choices. Early specialization paradigms may disadvantage some residents and residency groups and risk greater attrition rates.
确定PGY-1住院医师未来的专科 fellowship 偏好随着住院医师培训进程是否稳定。
对参加美国外科委员会住院医师培训考试(ABSITE)的住院医师进行关于专科 fellowship 的调查。创建了三个数据文件:所有研究生阶段(PGY)的分类和非指定初步培训学员;分类的PGY-1和总住院医师;以及有配对的PGY-1和PGY-5回复的个体分类住院医师。性别为自我报告;住院医师培训特征通过项目识别码获取。按专业以及其他、任何专科 fellowship(AF)和无专科 fellowship(NF)生成年度频率分布。
分类加包含超过80,000份回复。未决定始终主导PGY-1的意向,到2007年达到55%,并随着PGY级别提高近呈线性下降。AF率随PGY级别以减速曲线上升。其他率在PGY-3及以后加速上升。PGY-1和2的NF率较低,从PGY-3到4几乎翻倍,从PGY-4到5再次翻倍。分类组包含超过20,000名住院医师及其人口统计学信息。未决定组在男女中都占主导,但到2003年女性未决定的更多。专业分布因性别而异;女性在肿瘤学、儿科、整形和其他专业中占比过高。未决定组主导大学和独立PGY-1住院医师的选择,大学在除结直肠、整形和无专科 fellowship 外的所有领域占比过高。小型、中型和大型项目的PGY-1住院医师都首先选择未决定,但此后出现分歧。超过12,000对配对的分类PGY-1和PGY-5回复显示,大多数PGY-1住院医师(78%)到PGY-5时改变未来专业。未决定的住院医师最常选择无专科 fellowship(25%)、血管外科(12%)或其他(12%)。
PGY-1住院医师对未来专科 fellowship越来越不确定。PGY-1的偏好无论是按组还是按个体考察都不稳定。性别和住院医师培训特征与不同的选择模式相关。PGY-1住院医师很少能准确预测他们PGY-5时的专科 fellowship选择。早期专业化模式可能对一些住院医师和住院医师群体不利,并增加更高的 attrition率风险。 (注:这里“attrition rate”结合语境推测可能是“流失率”之类的意思,但原文未明确解释,所以保留英文)