Hahamyan Henrik A, Vasireddi Nikhil, Burns Bracken, Bousquet Stephanie A, Gould Heath P
College of Medicine, Quillen College of Medicine, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City, USA.
School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, USA.
Cureus. 2024 Oct 28;16(10):e72569. doi: 10.7759/cureus.72569. eCollection 2024 Oct.
The National Resident Matching Program (NRMP), which is responsible for matching medical students with residency programs in the United States, quantifies an applicant's research by aggregating their total number of publications, presentations, and abstracts (PPA). However, the program does not differentiate between peer-reviewed publications, which are typically academic studies evaluated by peers in the field, and other types of research output. While several studies have examined the peer-reviewed publications of matriculants in specific specialties, none have compared these specialties to identify trends across the residency match. Comparing peer-reviewed publications across specialties helps the NRMP, medical schools, and applicants identify evolving research expectations and align efforts with specialty-specific benchmarks. Therefore, this scoping review aimed to comprehensively synthesize studies that investigated the peer-reviewed publications of matched medical students. A systematic literature search was performed in September 2023 to identify and extract bibliometric variables from studies analyzing the peer-reviewed publications of matriculated medical students. Of 164 articles screened, 18 studies across 10 specialties were included. Neurosurgery matriculants had the most publications (4.67), whereas ophthalmology had the least (1.23). The proportion of students with zero peer-reviewed publications at application ranged from 22% (neurosurgery) to 47% (orthopedic surgery) and decreased over time for orthopedic and plastic surgery. Publications increased over time for nearly all reported specialties. Higher publication quantity and author H-index were associated with matching into higher-tiered residency programs across all analyzed specialties. The quantity and quality of medical student peer-reviewed publications continue to increase, and higher quality and quantity are associated with matching into higher-tiered programs. Given these trends, medical schools/advisors should continue fostering research mentorship, and students should prioritize both research quantity and quality to optimally prepare for the match. Simultaneously, residency selection committees and policymakers should critically assess whether strong research backgrounds are an optimal method to stratify future physicians and whether there are other avenues to prevent a growing research arms race.
美国国家住院医师匹配计划(NRMP)负责为美国的医学生与住院医师培训项目进行匹配,该计划通过汇总申请人的出版物、报告和摘要总数(PPA)来量化其研究成果。然而,该计划并未区分同行评审出版物(通常是由该领域同行评估的学术研究)和其他类型的研究产出。虽然有几项研究考察了特定专业录取学生的同行评审出版物,但没有一项研究对这些专业进行比较以确定住院医师匹配过程中的趋势。跨专业比较同行评审出版物有助于NRMP、医学院和申请人识别不断变化的研究期望,并使努力与特定专业的基准保持一致。因此,本范围综述旨在全面综合调查匹配医学生同行评审出版物的研究。2023年9月进行了系统的文献检索,以识别和提取分析录取医学生同行评审出版物的研究中的文献计量变量。在筛选的164篇文章中,纳入了涉及10个专业的18项研究。神经外科录取学生的出版物最多(4.67篇),而眼科最少(1.23篇)。申请时没有同行评审出版物的学生比例从22%(神经外科)到47%(整形外科)不等,整形外科和整形手术专业的这一比例随时间下降。几乎所有报告的专业的出版物数量都随时间增加。在所有分析的专业中,较高的出版物数量和作者H指数与匹配到更高层次的住院医师培训项目相关。医学生同行评审出版物的数量和质量持续增加,更高的质量和数量与匹配到更高层次的项目相关。鉴于这些趋势,医学院/导师应继续加强研究指导,学生应兼顾研究数量和质量,以便为匹配做好最佳准备。同时,住院医师选拔委员会和政策制定者应审慎评估强大的研究背景是否是对未来医生进行分层的最佳方法,以及是否有其他途径来防止日益激烈的研究竞争。