1Department of Neurological Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri; and.
2Department of Sociology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
J Neurosurg. 2023 May 19;139(6):1732-1740. doi: 10.3171/2023.3.JNS23288. Print 2023 Dec 1.
Although individuals underrepresented in medicine (URM) make up 33% of the United States population, only 12.6% of medical school graduates identify as URM; the same percentage of URM students comprises neurosurgery residency applicants. More information is needed to understand how URM students are making specialty decisions and their perceptions of neurosurgery. The authors aimed to evaluate the differences between URM and non-URM medical students and residents in terms of the factors that contribute to specialty decision-making and perceptions of neurosurgery.
A survey was administered to all medical students and resident physicians at a single Midwestern institution to assess factors influencing medical student specialty decision-making and perceptions of neurosurgery. Likert scale responses converted to numerical values on a 5-point scale (strongly agree was the high score of 5) were analyzed with the Mann-Whitney U-test. The chi-square test was performed on the binary responses to examine associations between categorical variables. Semistructured interviews were conducted and analyzed using the grounded theory method.
Of 272 respondents, 49.2% were medical students, 51.8% were residents, and 11.0% identified as URM. URM medical students considered research opportunities more than non-URM medical students in specialty decision-making (p = 0.023). When specialty decision-making factors were assessed, URM residents less strongly considered the technical skill required (p = 0.023), their perceived fit in the field (p < 0.001), and seeing people like them in the field (p = 0.010) than their non-URM counterparts when making specialty decisions. Within both medical student and resident respondent cohorts, the authors found no significant differences between URM and non-URM respondents in terms of their specialty decision-making being affected by medical school experiences such as shadowing, elective rotations, family exposure, or having a mentor in the field. URM residents were more concerned about the opportunity to work on health equity issues in neurosurgery than non-URM residents (p = 0.005). The predominant theme that emerged from interviews was the need for more intentional efforts to recruit and retain URM individuals in medicine and specifically neurosurgery.
URM students may make specialty decisions differently than non-URM students. URM students were more hesitant toward neurosurgery due to their perceived lack of opportunity for health equity work in neurosurgery. These findings further inform optimization of both new and existing initiatives to improve URM student recruitment and retention in neurosurgery.
尽管在美国人口中,代表性不足的医学专业人员(URM)占 33%,但只有 12.6%的医学院毕业生是 URM;同样比例的 URM 学生构成神经外科学住院医师申请人。需要更多信息来了解 URM 学生如何做出专业决策以及他们对神经外科学的看法。作者旨在评估 URM 和非 URM 医学生和住院医师在影响专业决策的因素以及对神经外科学的看法方面的差异。
在一家中西部机构对所有医学生和住院医师进行了一项调查,以评估影响医学生专业决策和对神经外科学看法的因素。采用 5 分制(非常同意为 5 分)的李克特量表评分转换为数值,采用曼-惠特尼 U 检验进行分析。对二项反应进行卡方检验,以检验分类变量之间的关联。对半结构化访谈进行分析,采用扎根理论方法。
在 272 名受访者中,49.2%是医学生,51.8%是住院医师,11.0%是 URM。与非 URM 医学生相比,URM 医学生在专业决策中更看重研究机会(p=0.023)。在评估专业决策因素时,URM 住院医师在考虑专业决策时,对技术技能的要求(p=0.023)、对该领域的适应程度(p<0.001)和看到像他们一样的人在该领域(p=0.010)的重视程度不如非 URM 住院医师。在医学生和住院医师两个受访者群体中,作者都没有发现 URM 和非 URM 受访者在专业决策方面受到医学生经历(如观摩、选修轮转、家庭接触或该领域导师)的影响存在显著差异。与非 URM 住院医师相比,URM 住院医师更关心神经外科学中解决卫生公平问题的机会(p=0.005)。访谈中出现的主要主题是需要更有针对性地努力招募和留住医学领域,特别是神经外科学领域的 URM 个人。
URM 学生的专业决策可能与非 URM 学生不同。URM 学生对神经外科学犹豫不决,因为他们认为在神经外科学中没有机会解决卫生公平问题。这些发现进一步说明了优化新的和现有的举措以提高 URM 学生在神经外科学中的招募和保留率的必要性。