Miller Danielle T, Krzyzaniak Sara, Mannix Alexandra, Alvarez Al'ai, Chan Teresa, Davenport Dayle, Eraso Daniel, Foote C J, Gore Katarzyna, Parsons Melissa, Gottlieb Michael
Department of Emergency Medicine Stanford University School of Medicine Palo Alto California USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine University of Florida College of Medicine Jacksonville Jacksonville Florida USA.
AEM Educ Train. 2021 Jul 1;5(3):e10607. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10607. eCollection 2021 Jul.
The standardized letter of evaluation (SLOE) in emergency medicine (EM) is a widely used metric for determining interview invitations and ranking of candidates. Previous research has questioned the validity of certain sections of the SLOE. However, there remains a paucity of literature on the qualifications for EM section, which evaluates seven attributes of applicants. The aim of this study was to determine the correlation between the qualifications questions and grades, global assessment, and anticipated rank list position for EM applicants.
A multi-institutional cross-sectional study was performed using SLOEs from applicants to three geographically distinct U.S. EM residency programs during the 2019-2020 application cycle. We abstracted EM rotation grade, qualifications scores, global assessment, and anticipated rank list position from the SLOEs. A Spearman correlation was calculated between each of the qualifications scores and the applicant's grades, global assessment, and anticipated rank list position in a pairwise fashion.
In total, 2,106 unique applicants (4,939 SLOEs) were included. Of the seven qualifications for EM questions, three were moderately to strongly correlated with global assessment and anticipated rank list position: "ability to develop and justify an appropriate differential and a cohesive treatment plan" (ρ = 0.65 and ρ = 0.63, respectively; p < 0.001), "how much guidance do you predict this applicant will need during residency?" (ρ = 0.68 and ρ = 0.68, respectively; p < 0.001), and "what is your prediction of success for the applicant?" (ρ = 0.69 and ρ = 0.69, respectively; p < 0.001). There was no strong correlation between the seven qualifications and grades.
There was a moderate to strong correlation between three of seven qualifications for EM questions (ability to develop and justify a differential and develop a cohesive plan, anticipated need for the amount of guidance, and prediction of success) with both global assessment and anticipated rank list position, suggesting that these qualifications may provide the most useful data to residency selection while some of the other factors may not be needed.
急诊医学(EM)标准化评估信(SLOE)是用于确定面试邀请和候选人排名的广泛使用的指标。先前的研究对SLOE某些部分的有效性提出了质疑。然而,关于评估申请人七个属性的EM部分的资格的文献仍然很少。本研究的目的是确定资格问题与EM申请人的成绩、整体评估以及预期排名列表位置之间的相关性。
在2019 - 2020年申请周期内,对来自美国三个地理位置不同的EM住院医师项目申请人的SLOE进行了多机构横断面研究。我们从SLOE中提取了EM轮转成绩、资格分数、整体评估和预期排名列表位置。以成对方式计算每个资格分数与申请人的成绩、整体评估和预期排名列表位置之间的Spearman相关性。
总共纳入了2106名独特申请人(4939份SLOE)。在EM问题的七个资格中,有三个与整体评估和预期排名列表位置呈中度到强相关性:“制定和论证适当鉴别诊断及连贯治疗计划的能力”(分别为ρ = 0.65和ρ = 0.63;p < 0.001),“你预计该申请人在住院医师培训期间需要多少指导?”(分别为ρ = 0.68和ρ = 0.68;p < 0.001),以及“你对该申请人成功的预测是什么?”(分别为ρ = 0.69和ρ = 0.69;p < 0.001)。七个资格与成绩之间没有强相关性。
EM问题的七个资格中的三个(制定和论证鉴别诊断及制定连贯计划的能力、预期所需指导量、成功预测)与整体评估和预期排名列表位置之间存在中度到强相关性,这表明这些资格可能为住院医师选拔提供最有用的数据,而其他一些因素可能并非必要。