is a Third Year Medical Student, University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine.
is Associate Professor of Medicine, Section of Emergency Medicine, and Program Director, Emergency Medicine Residency Program, University of Chicago Medical Center.
J Grad Med Educ. 2022 Aug;14(4):431-438. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-21-01097.1.
The number of for-profit hospitals has increased in the United States, but their role in and outcomes for graduate medical education (GME) are unclear.
To describe for-profit involvement in internal medicine (IM), general surgery (GS), and pediatrics GME by quantifying change in for-profit affiliated residency programs and comparing for-profit and nonprofit affiliated program board certifying examination pass rates.
We used Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and Medicare data to quantify for-profit prevalence in IM, GS, and pediatrics GME from 2001 to 2021. We used public pass rate data from the American Board of Surgeons (2017-2019; n=242 programs; 6562 examinees), American Board of Internal Medicine (2018-2020; n=465 programs; 23 922 examinees), and American Board of Pediatrics (2018-2020; n=202 programs; 9819 examinees) to model the relationship between profit status and pass rate within each specialty and across specialties combined using linear regression.
The proportion of for-profit affiliated residency programs increased 400.0% in IM, 334.4% in GS, and 23.2% in pediatrics from 2001 to 2021. Bivariate linear regression revealed significantly lower pass rate in for-profit affiliated programs in IM β =-7.73, <.001), pediatrics (β =-14.6, <.001), and the 3 specialties combined (β =-5.45, <.001). Upon multiple regression with addition of program characteristic covariates, this relationship remained significant in pediatrics (β =-10.04, =.006).
The proportion of for-profit affiliated residency programs has increased in IM, GS, and pediatrics from 2001 to 2021. After controlling for covariates, for-profit affiliated programs were associated with lower board examination pass rates in pediatrics with no association in IM, GS, or the combined measure.
美国营利性医院的数量有所增加,但它们在医学研究生教育(GME)中的作用和结果尚不清楚。
通过量化营利性附属住院医师培训计划的变化,描述内科(IM)、普通外科(GS)和儿科学 GME 中的营利性参与,并比较营利性和非营利性附属计划的委员会认证考试通过率。
我们使用研究生医学教育认证委员会和医疗保险数据,从 2001 年到 2021 年量化了 IM、GS 和儿科学 GME 中的营利性普遍性。我们使用美国外科医师学会(2017-2019 年;n=242 个项目;6562 名考生)、美国内科医师学会(2018-2020 年;n=465 个项目;23922 名考生)和美国儿科学会(2018-2020 年;n=202 个项目;9819 名考生)的公开通过率数据,使用线性回归在每个专业和所有专业中建模营利性状态与通过率之间的关系。
从 2001 年到 2021 年,营利性附属住院医师培训计划在 IM 中的比例增加了 400.0%,在 GS 中的比例增加了 334.4%,在儿科学中的比例增加了 23.2%。双变量线性回归显示,IM(β=-7.73,<.001)、儿科学(β=-14.6,<.001)和 3 个专业组合(β=-5.45,<.001)中营利性附属项目的通过率显著较低。在加入程序特征协变量的多元回归中,这种关系在儿科学中仍然显著(β=-10.04,=.006)。
从 2001 年到 2021 年,IM、GS 和儿科学中的营利性附属住院医师培训计划的比例有所增加。在控制协变量后,营利性附属项目与儿科委员会考试通过率较低相关,而在 IM、GS 或综合措施中则没有相关性。