Whitley Jorge A, Joyner Byron D, Asante Peter G, Waters William Bedford, Kieran Kathleen
Seattle Children's Hospital, Division of Urology, Seattle, WA.
Seattle Children's Hospital, Division of Urology, Seattle, WA; University of Washington Department of Urology, Seattle, WA.
Urology. 2022 Apr;162:91-98. doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2021.08.060. Epub 2021 Oct 30.
To investigate whether interview travel cost and time differed for urology residency applicants from medical schools with higher vs lower proportions of students from groups underrepresented in medicine (URiMs).
We identified 22 medical schools, 11 with <15% and 11 with >20% URiM students, and 17 "highly ranked" urology residency programs. We contacted the residency programs and requested interview dates, preferred lodging options, and institution-based cost-savings. We constructed interview itineraries for 22 hypothetical students (one from each school), and compared the total cost and time for travel to all 17 interviews. Total travel time and interview costs for the students at schools with <15% and >20% URiM were compared, with findings considered statistically significant at P <.05.
Each student was able to attend all 17 interviews. The median total cost was similar for applicants from schools >20% URiM ($8074.80; range: $7027.60-$13702.59) and <15% URiM ($8764.60; range: $6698.48-$11966.83; P = .89). The median aggregate travel time for applicants from schools >20% URiM was 176.4 (range: 93.7-246.2) hours and for applicants from schools <15% URiM was 160.5 (range: 128.2-203.9) hours (P = .62).
Financial and temporal costs were similar for applicants from medical schools with <15% or >20% URiM students. Thus, absolute cost considerations are unlikely to account for differences in URiM representation in urology. However, the relative impact of interview costs may be different for URiM students. Effective and durable engagement of URiM students in urology requires an introspective assessment of objective vs anecdotal barriers to recruiting and retaining URiM medical students.
调查来自医学院的泌尿外科住院医师申请者的面试差旅费和时间,这些医学院中来自医学领域代表性不足群体(URiMs)的学生比例较高或较低。
我们确定了22所医学院,其中11所医学院的URiM学生比例低于15%,11所医学院的URiM学生比例高于20%,以及17个“排名靠前”的泌尿外科住院医师项目。我们联系了住院医师项目,询问面试日期、首选住宿选项以及基于机构的成本节省情况。我们为22名假设的学生(每个学校一名)制定了面试行程,并比较了前往所有17次面试的总费用和时间。比较了URiM学生比例低于15%和高于20%的学校的学生的总旅行时间和面试费用,当P <.05时,研究结果被认为具有统计学意义。
每个学生都能够参加所有17次面试。URiM学生比例高于20%的学校的申请者的总费用中位数(8074.80美元;范围:7027.60 - 13702.59美元)与URiM学生比例低于15%的学校的申请者的总费用中位数(8764.60美元;范围:6698.48 - 11966.83美元;P = 0.89)相似。URiM学生比例高于20%的学校的申请者的总旅行时间中位数为176.4(范围:93.7 - 246.2)小时,URiM学生比例低于15%的学校的申请者的总旅行时间中位数为160.5(范围:128.2 - 203.9)小时(P = 0.62)。
URiM学生比例低于15%或高于20%的医学院的申请者的财务和时间成本相似。因此,绝对成本考虑不太可能解释泌尿外科中URiM代表性的差异。然而,面试成本的相对影响对于URiM学生可能不同。要让URiM学生有效地长期参与泌尿外科领域,需要对招募和留住URiM医学生的客观障碍与传闻障碍进行自省评估。