Sparks Chandler A, Contrada Edward V, Kraeutler Matthew J, Scillia Anthony J
Orthopedic Surgery, Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine, Nutley, USA.
Orthopaedic Surgery and Rehabilitation, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, Lubbock, USA.
Cureus. 2025 Mar 9;17(3):e80303. doi: 10.7759/cureus.80303. eCollection 2025 Mar.
Pipelining is the phenomenon whereby applicants from the same medical schools repeatedly match into the same residency programs. We sought to quantify the prevalence of pipelining in the United States (US) orthopedic surgery residency match and to compare these practices amongst geographic regions.
Resident information was obtained from program webpages. New programs without five years of residents, programs that did not publicly report resident information, and programs with incomplete information were excluded. For the remaining programs, the pipelining ratio was calculated (pipelining ratio = no. of residents/no. of different medical schools represented over the study duration). We also recorded the proportion of each program's residents that attended the single most represented medical school at each program during the study period and the number of years in which at least two residents from the same medical school matched into a program. Residency program geographic region and the number of medical schools within a 50-, 100-, and 200-mile radius of each program were also recorded.
The median pipelining ratio amongst programs included (n = 159) was 1.5 (interquartile range (IQR) = 1.32-1.79; Range = 1-4.83). The pipelining ratio varied by geographic region (p<0.01), with programs in the Midwest (p = 0.04) and South (p = 0.04) having a higher pipelining ratio than programs in the Northeast. The proportion of each program composed of the most represented medical school varied by geographic region (p<0.01), with programs in the South having a higher proportion of their classes composed of residents from a single medical school than programs in the Northeast (p<0.01) and Western US (p = 0.03). The pipelining ratio and proportion of each program's residents from a single shared medical school showed no correlation or a very weak negative correlation with the number of medical schools within a 50-, 100-, and 200-mile radius of each program.
Most orthopedic residency programs fall within a range of fair to moderate pipelining, though it is more common in Southern US programs. These practices can limit opportunities for qualified applicants and should be monitored due to recent changes in pass/fail scoring of the US Medical Licensing Step 1 Exam and virtual interviews.
流水线现象是指来自同一医学院校的申请者反复匹配到相同的住院医师培训项目。我们试图量化美国骨科手术住院医师匹配中流水线现象的发生率,并比较不同地理区域的这些情况。
从项目网页获取住院医师信息。排除没有五年住院医师的新项目、未公开报告住院医师信息的项目以及信息不完整的项目。对于其余项目,计算流水线比例(流水线比例=住院医师人数/研究期间所代表的不同医学院校数量)。我们还记录了每个项目中在研究期间来自单一代表人数最多的医学院校的住院医师比例,以及至少有两名来自同一医学院校的住院医师匹配到一个项目的年份数。还记录了住院医师培训项目的地理区域以及每个项目半径50、100和200英里范围内的医学院校数量。
纳入的项目(n = 159)中,流水线比例的中位数为1.5(四分位间距(IQR)= 1.32 - 1.79;范围 = 1 - 4.83)。流水线比例因地理区域而异(p<0.01),中西部(p = 0.04)和南部(p = 0.04)的项目流水线比例高于东北部的项目。每个项目中由代表人数最多的医学院校组成的比例因地理区域而异(p<0.01),南部项目中来自单一医学院校的住院医师班级比例高于东北部(p<0.01)和美国西部(p = 0.03)的项目。每个项目的流水线比例以及来自单一共同医学院校的住院医师比例与每个项目半径50、100和200英里范围内的医学院校数量无相关性或呈非常弱的负相关。
大多数骨科住院医师培训项目的流水线程度处于公平到中等范围内,尽管在美国南部项目中更为常见。由于美国医师执照考试第一步的通过/失败评分以及虚拟面试的近期变化,这些情况可能会限制合格申请者的机会,应予以监测。