Yaeger Kurt A, Schupper Alexander J, Gilligan Jeffrey T, Germano Isabelle M
J Neurosurg. 2021 May 28;135(6):1882-1888. doi: 10.3171/2020.11.JNS203637. Print 2021 Dec 1.
Neurosurgery is a highly competitive residency field with a match rate lower than that of other specialties. The aim of this study was to analyze trends associated with the residency match process from the applicants' and program directors' perspectives.
Between 2010 and 2020, the National Residency Matching Program (NRMP) Applicant and Program Director Surveys, the NRMP Charting Outcomes reports, and the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Data Resource Books were analyzed to identify the number of applicants interviewed and ranked in US programs, the applicants' ranking preferences, the program directors' preferential factors in offering interviews, and rank list order. Applicants were divided between US senior medical students and independent applicants. Each cohort was dichotomized for matched and unmatched applicants.
Over the study period, 2935 applicants applied to neurosurgery residency, including 2135 US senior medical students and 800 independent applicants, with an overall match rate of 65%. Overall, matched applicants had a significantly higher number of publications (p < 0.05). Among US senior medical student applicants, the application-to-interview ratio more than doubled over the study period, yet the number of interview invitations received, interviews accepted, and programs ranked remained unchanged. In the US senior medical student cohort, the number of submitted applications, interview invitations, accepted interviews, and programs ranked did not significantly differ between matched and unmatched applicants. In both cohorts, applicants shifted ranking factors from a more academic focus in early years to more well-being in later years. Letters of recommendation and board scores were key factors for program directors while screening applicants for interviews and ranking.
Neurosurgery residency continues to be a highly competitive field in medicine, with match rates of 65%. Recently, applicants have placed greater importance on ranking programs that value residents' well-being, as opposed to strictly academic factors. A data-driven understanding of factors important to applicants and program directors during the match process has the potential to improve resident candidate recruitment and overall resident-program fit, thereby improving well-being during residency, reducing the attrition rate, and overall enhancing the diversity of the neurosurgery resident workforce.
神经外科是一个竞争激烈的住院医师培训领域,其匹配率低于其他专科。本研究的目的是从申请人和项目主任的角度分析与住院医师匹配过程相关的趋势。
分析2010年至2020年期间的全国住院医师匹配计划(NRMP)申请人和项目主任调查、NRMP结果报告以及研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)数据资源手册,以确定在美国项目中接受面试和排名的申请人数量、申请人的排名偏好、项目主任提供面试的优先因素以及排名列表顺序。申请人分为美国高年级医学生和独立申请人。每个队列又分为匹配和未匹配的申请人。
在研究期间,2935名申请人申请神经外科住院医师培训,其中包括2135名美国高年级医学生和800名独立申请人,总体匹配率为65%。总体而言,匹配的申请人发表的论文数量显著更多(p<0.05)。在美国高年级医学生申请人中,申请与面试的比例在研究期间增加了一倍多,但收到的面试邀请数量、接受的面试数量以及排名的项目数量保持不变。在美国高年级医学生队列中,匹配和未匹配的申请人在提交的申请数量、面试邀请数量、接受的面试数量以及排名的项目数量方面没有显著差异。在两个队列中,申请人的排名因素从早年更注重学术转向晚年更注重幸福感。推荐信和委员会分数是项目主任筛选申请人进行面试和排名时的关键因素。
神经外科住院医师培训在医学领域仍然是一个竞争激烈的领域,匹配率为65%。最近,申请人更加重视对重视住院医师幸福感的项目进行排名,而不是严格的学术因素。在匹配过程中,以数据为驱动了解对申请人和项目主任重要的因素,有可能改善住院医师候选人的招募以及住院医师与项目的整体匹配度,从而提高住院医师培训期间的幸福感,降低流失率,并总体上提高神经外科住院医师队伍的多样性。