Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas.
Thomas Jefferson College of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Urol Pract. 2024 May;11(3):577-584. doi: 10.1097/UPJ.0000000000000556. Epub 2024 Mar 23.
The United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Step 1 test evolved into a key metric utilized by program directors (PDs) in assessing candidates for residency. The transition to a USMLE Step 1 binary pass/fail scoring system has resulted in a loss of an important objective assessment. With national movements toward pass/fail systems for clerkship grading and trends toward abandonment of class ranking, assessing residency applications has become increasingly challenging.
The Society of Academic Urologists convened a task force to, in part, assess the perspectives of urology PDs regarding the importance of various aspects of a residency application for predicting clinical performance. An anonymous survey was disseminated to all urology PDs in the US. Perspectives on 11 potential application predictors of clinical performance and demographics were recorded. Descriptive statistics characterized PD responses. Friedman test and pairwise Wilcoxon tests were used to evaluate the relative ranks assigned to application elements by PDs.
There was a 60.5% response rate (89/147). Letters of recommendation (LORs) were ranked as the most important predictor, with a mean rank of 2.39, median of 2 (IQR 1-3). Clerkship grades and USMLE Step 1 were comparable and ranked second. Medical school reputation ranked the lowest. There was significant subjective heterogeneity among categories; however, this was less so for LORs, which predominated as the most important factor among application elements ( < .001).
To our knowledge, this is the largest sample size assessing PD perspectives on application factors that predict clinical performance. The second (clerkship grades) and third (USLME Step 1) most important factors moving toward binary pass/fail systems create an opportunity for actionable change to improve assessment objectivity. Our data demonstrate LORs to be the most important factor of residency applications, making a compelling argument for moving toward a standardized LOR to maximize this tool, mitigate bias, and improve interreviewer reliability.
美国医师执照考试(USMLE)第 1 步考试已演变为项目主任(PD)评估住院医师候选人的关键指标。向 USMLE 第 1 步通过/失败二分制评分系统的转变导致失去了一个重要的客观评估。随着全国范围内对实习成绩通过/失败制的运动以及放弃班级排名的趋势,评估住院医师申请变得越来越具有挑战性。
学术泌尿科医师协会召集了一个工作组,部分评估泌尿科 PD 对住院医师申请中各个方面对预测临床表现的重要性的看法。向美国所有泌尿科 PD 分发了匿名调查。记录了对 11 种潜在的申请预测临床表现和人口统计学特征的观点。PD 反应的描述性统计特征。弗里德曼检验和配对威尔科克森检验用于评估 PD 对应用要素的相对等级。
回复率为 60.5%(89/147)。推荐信(LOR)被评为最重要的预测因素,平均等级为 2.39,中位数为 2(IQR 1-3)。实习成绩和 USMLE 第 1 步成绩相当,排名第二。医学院声誉排名最低。类别之间存在显著的主观异质性;然而,LOR 的主观异质性较小,LOR 是申请要素中最重要的因素(<0.001)。
据我们所知,这是评估 PD 对预测临床表现的申请因素的看法的最大样本量。第二个(实习成绩)和第三个(USLME 第 1 步)最重要的因素向通过/失败的二进制系统发展,为提高评估客观性提供了可采取的改变机会。我们的数据表明 LOR 是住院医师申请中最重要的因素,这有力地证明了采用标准化 LOR 以最大限度地利用这一工具、减轻偏见和提高同行评审者的可靠性的合理性。