Family and Community Medicine, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Office of Admissions, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, MSC 09 5085, HSLIC Rm 125, Albuquerque, NM, 87105, USA.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract. 2018 Aug;23(3):601-610. doi: 10.1007/s10459-018-9817-2. Epub 2018 Feb 14.
Web-based interviewing may be an effective element of a medical school's larger approach to promotion of holistic review, as recommended by the Association of American Medical Colleges, by facilitating the feasibility of including rural and community physicians in the interview process. Only 10% of medical schools offer videoconference interviews to applicants and little is known about the impact of this interview modality on the admissions process. This study investigated the impact of overall acceptance rates using videoconference interviews and face-to-face interviews in the medical school selection process using an equivalence trial design. The University of New Mexico School of Medicine integrated a videoconferencing interview option for community and rural physician interviewers in a pseudo-random fashion during the 2014-2016 admissions cycles. Logistic regression was conducted to examine whether videoconference interviews impacted acceptance rates or the characteristics of accepted students. Demographic, admissions and diversity factors were analyzed that included applicant age, MCAT score, cumulative GPA, gender, underrepresented in medicine, socioeconomic status and geographic residency. Data from 752 interviews were analyzed. Adjusted rates of acceptance for face-to-face (37.0%; 95% CI 28.2, 46.7%) and videoconference (36.1%; 95% CI 17.8, 59.5%) interviews were within an a priori ± 5% margin of equivalence. Both interview conditions yielded highly diverse groups of admitted students. Having a higher medical college admission test score, grade point average, and self-identifying as disadvantaged increased odds of admission in both interview modalities. Integration of the videoconference interview did not impact the overall acceptance of a highly diverse and qualified group of applicants, and allowed rural and community physicians to participate in the medical school interview process as well as allowed campus faculty and medical student committee members to interview remotely.
基于网络的面试可能是美国医学院协会(Association of American Medical Colleges)所建议的整体审查推广策略中的一个有效元素,通过促进农村和社区医生参与面试过程的可行性来实现。只有 10%的医学院为申请人提供视频会议面试,而对于这种面试模式对招生过程的影响知之甚少。本研究采用等效试验设计,调查了在医学院校选择过程中使用视频会议面试和面对面面试的总体录取率的影响。新墨西哥大学医学院在 2014-2016 年招生周期中以伪随机方式整合了社区和农村医生面试官的视频会议面试选择。使用逻辑回归来检验视频会议面试是否影响录取率或录取学生的特征。分析了人口统计学、招生和多样性因素,包括申请人年龄、MCAT 分数、累积 GPA、性别、医学领域代表性不足、社会经济地位和地理居住。分析了 752 次面试的数据。面对面(37.0%;95%CI 28.2,46.7%)和视频会议(36.1%;95%CI 17.8,59.5%)面试的调整接受率在预先设定的±5%等效范围内。两种面试条件都产生了高度多样化的录取学生群体。在两种面试模式中,较高的医学院入学考试成绩、平均绩点和自我认定的不利地位都增加了录取的可能性。整合视频会议面试并没有影响到一群高度多样化和合格的申请人的总体录取率,并且允许农村和社区医生参与医学院校面试过程,也允许校园教职员工和医学生委员会成员远程面试。