Raghavan Malathi, Martin Bruce D, Burnett Margaret, Aoki Fred, Christensen Heather, Mackalski Barbara, Young Deborah G, Ripstein Ira
Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Rural Remote Health. 2013 Apr-Jun;13(2):2362. Epub 2013 Apr 9.
Students from rural areas are under-represented in medical schools. Concerns have been raised about rural applicants' qualifications relative to those of their urban counterparts, and the impact such potential differences in competitiveness may have on their under-representation. Although studies have reported no differences in Grade Point Average (GPA) and Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) scores between applicants with and without rural attributes, to date no study has assessed if performance on the multiple mini-interview (MMI) varies between the two groups.
The MMI scores of 1257 interviewees for admission to the MD program at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, in years 2008 to 2011, were studied for an association with graduation from a rural high school and attributes in the following three domains: rural connections, employment in rural areas, and rural community service.
There were 205 (16.3%) rural high school graduates among interviewed applicants. Rural high school graduates scored significantly lower (mean of 4.4 on a scale of 1 to 7; p < 0.05) than urban high school graduates (4.6). Among rural-attribute domains, those with rural community service alone had the highest MMI scores (4.9) while those with rural connections alone had the lowest scores (4.3; p = 0.016). After adjusting for demographics, GPA, and MCAT scores in a multiple linear regression model, rural-attribute domains were not significant predictors of an applicant's MMI score. However, graduation from a rural high school was significantly associated with decreased MMI scores (a 0.122 decrease in predicted MMI scores on a scale of 1 to 7).
Despite graduates from rural and urban high schools having comparable GPA, there exists a rural-urban divide in MMI scores that could exacerbate the under-representation of rural students in medical schools. Aboriginal applicants can also potentially be disproportionately affected, as they were more often from rural high schools than from urban high schools. Future studies need to determine systematic and institutional reasons, if any, for the differential in MMI scoring that can affect admission decisions for some rural applicants. It is also to be noted that the magnitude of difference is small enough that it may ultimately be irrelevant for future physician performance and practitioner outcomes.
农村地区的学生在医学院中的占比不足。人们对农村申请者相对于城市申请者的资质,以及这种竞争力方面的潜在差异可能对他们代表性不足所产生的影响表示担忧。尽管研究报告称,有无农村背景的申请者在平均绩点(GPA)和医学院入学考试(MCAT)成绩上并无差异,但迄今为止,尚无研究评估两组在多重迷你面试(MMI)中的表现是否存在差异。
对2008年至2011年期间在曼尼托巴大学医学院申请医学博士项目的1257名受访者的MMI成绩进行研究,以探讨其与农村高中毕业生身份以及以下三个领域的特征之间的关联:农村人脉、农村地区就业经历和农村社区服务经历。
受访申请者中有205人(16.3%)是农村高中毕业生。农村高中毕业生的得分显著低于城市高中毕业生(1至7分制下平均分为4.4分;p<0.05),城市高中毕业生平均分为4.6分。在农村特征领域中,仅具有农村社区服务经历的人MMI得分最高(4.9分),而仅有人脉关系的人得分最低(4.3分;p=0.016)。在多元线性回归模型中对人口统计学、GPA和MCAT成绩进行调整后,农村特征领域并非申请者MMI成绩的显著预测因素。然而,农村高中毕业生身份与MMI成绩降低显著相关(1至7分制下预测的MMI成绩降低0.122分)。
尽管农村和城市高中毕业生的GPA相当,但MMI成绩存在城乡差异,这可能会加剧农村学生在医学院中代表性不足的问题。原住民申请者也可能受到不成比例的影响,因为他们来自农村高中的比例高于城市高中。未来的研究需要确定MMI评分差异的系统性和制度性原因(如果有的话),这种差异可能会影响一些农村申请者的录取决定。还需注意的是,差异幅度足够小,最终可能与未来医生的表现和从业者的成果无关。