O. Mian is research associate, Centre for Rural and Northern Health Research, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. J.C. Hogenbirk is senior research associate, Centre for Rural and Northern Health Research, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada; ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0841-4657. D.C. Marsh is professor of clinical sciences, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8769-1785. O. Prowse is assistant dean for admissions, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. M. Cain is director of admissions and recruitment, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. W. Warry is currently director, Rural Health Initiatives, Memory Keepers Medical Discovery Team, and professor of family medicine and biobehavioral health, University of Minnesota, Duluth, Minnesota. At the time of writing, he was director, Centre for Rural and Northern Health Research, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.
Acad Med. 2019 Aug;94(8):1211-1219. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002636.
To describe the admissions process and outcomes for Indigenous applicants to the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM), a Canadian medical school with the mandate to recruit students whose demographics reflect the service region's population.
The authors examined 10-year trends (2006-2015) for self-identified Indigenous applicants through major admission stages. Demographics (age, sex, northern and rural backgrounds) and admission scores (grade point average [GPA], preinterview, multiple mini-interview [MMI], final), along with score-based ranks, of Indigenous and non-Indigenous applicants were compared using Pearson chi-square and Mann-Whitney tests. Binary logistic regression was used to assess the relationship between Indigenous status and likelihood of admission outcomes (interviewed, received offer, admitted).
Indigenous qualified applicants (338/17,060; 2.0%) were more likely to be female, mature (25 or older), or of northern or rural background than non-Indigenous applicants. They had lower GPA-based ranks than non-Indigenous applicants (P < .001) but had comparable preinterview-, MMI-, and final-score-based ranks across all admission stages. Indigenous applicants were 2.4 times more likely to be interviewed and 2.5 times more likely to receive an admission offer, but 3 times less likely to accept an offer than non-Indigenous applicants. Overall, 41/338 (12.1%) Indigenous qualified applicants were admitted compared with 569/16,722 (3.4%) non-Indigenous qualified applicants.
Increased representation of Indigenous peoples among applicants admitted to medical school can be achieved through the use of socially accountable admissions. Further tracking of Indigenous students through medical education and practice may help assess the effectiveness of NOSM's social accountability admissions process.
描述加拿大北方医学院(NOSM)招收原住民申请人的入学程序和结果。NOSM 是一所加拿大医学院,其任务是招收的学生在人口统计学上反映服务地区的人口情况。
作者通过主要入学阶段,研究了 10 年来(2006-2015 年)自我认定的原住民申请人的趋势。通过 Pearson χ²检验和 Mann-Whitney 检验,比较了原住民和非原住民申请人的人口统计学数据(年龄、性别、北部和农村背景)和入学成绩(平均绩点[GPA]、预面试、多站迷你面试[MMI]、最终成绩)以及基于成绩的排名。采用二项逻辑回归评估原住民身份与入学结果(面试、获得录取、录取)之间的关系。
符合条件的原住民申请人(338/17060;2.0%)更有可能是女性、成年(25 岁及以上)或来自北部或农村背景,而非原住民申请人。他们的 GPA 基础排名低于非原住民申请人(P<.001),但在所有入学阶段的预面试、MMI 和最终成绩基础排名上相当。原住民申请人被面试的可能性是 2.4 倍,获得录取的可能性是 2.5 倍,但接受录取的可能性比非原住民申请人低 3 倍。总体而言,338 名符合条件的原住民申请人中有 41 名(12.1%)被录取,而 16722 名符合条件的非原住民申请人中有 569 名(3.4%)被录取。
通过采用对社会负责的招生方式,可以增加医学院录取的原住民人数。通过医学教育和实践进一步跟踪原住民学生,可能有助于评估 NOSM 对社会负责的招生过程的有效性。