Solis Roberto N, Quesada Pompeyo R, Ma Cheng, Olinde Lindsay M, Diaz Rodney C
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA, USA.
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso Paul L. Foster School of Medicine, El Paso, TX, USA.
Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol. 2020 Nov;129(11):1056-1062. doi: 10.1177/0003489420928381. Epub 2020 Jun 2.
To elucidate the frequency and types of pre- and post-interview communication that applicants engage with programs, to garner the perceptions of both applicants and program directors (PDs), and determine if communication influences outcomes.
Electronic surveys were distributed to otolaryngology residency applicants, and to PDs of ACGME-accredited otolaryngology programs after the 2018 to 2019 application cycle.
93 of 324 applicants (28.7%) and 33 of 106 PDs (31.3%) responded. In the pre-interview period, 58.1% of applicants sent emails of interest, and 41.9% had a mentor initiate communication. In the post-interview period, the majority of applicants (82.8%) sent notes of intent to their number one choice, and 32.3% had a faculty mentor communicate this on their behalf. The majority of PDs (84.8%) were undecided or did not believe that emails of interest influence decisions to offer an interview, whereas 81.8% believed that communication initiated by an applicant's mentor has an impact on interview offers. No PD agreed that declarations of intent from applicants have an impact on their rank lists, while only 33.3% of PDs believed that a mentor communicating this for an applicant has some impact. Our statistical findings are in agreement with these perceptions as neither applicant-initiated pre-interview ( = .54), mentor-initiated pre-interview ( = .62), applicant-initiated post-interview ( = .11) nor mentor-initiated post-interview ( = .78) communications influenced the number of interviews received or ultimate match outcome.
Pre- and post-interview communication practices vary widely among otolaryngology applicants. Applicant-initiated communication has no impact on outcomes, while mentor-initiated communication is perceived to have more benefit, despite not impacting interview or match outcomes in this study.
阐明申请者与项目之间面试前和面试后沟通的频率及类型,收集申请者和项目主任(PD)的看法,并确定沟通是否会影响结果。
在2018至2019年申请周期结束后,向耳鼻咽喉科住院医师申请者以及美国研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)认证的耳鼻咽喉科项目的项目主任发放电子调查问卷。
324名申请者中的93名(28.7%)以及106名项目主任中的33名(31.3%)进行了回复。在面试前阶段,58.1%的申请者发送了意向邮件,41.9%有导师发起沟通。在面试后阶段,大多数申请者(82.8%)向其第一选择发送了意向书,32.3%有教员导师代其进行沟通。大多数项目主任(84.8%)未做决定或不认为意向邮件会影响提供面试的决定,而81.8%认为申请者导师发起的沟通会对面试邀请产生影响。没有项目主任同意申请者的意向声明会对他们的排名列表产生影响,而只有33.3%的项目主任认为导师代申请者进行此沟通会有一定影响。我们的统计结果与这些看法一致,因为无论是申请者发起的面试前沟通(P = 0.54)、导师发起的面试前沟通(P = 0.62)、申请者发起的面试后沟通(P = 0.11)还是导师发起的面试后沟通(P = 0.78),都未影响收到的面试数量或最终匹配结果。
耳鼻咽喉科申请者在面试前和面试后的沟通方式差异很大。申请者发起的沟通对结果没有影响,而导师发起的沟通被认为更有益,尽管在本研究中它并未影响面试或匹配结果。