Soto-Mota Adrian, Prado Andrés Castañeda, Lara María Fernanda González, Ortiz Laura Jael, Soto-Mota Pablo
Metabolic Diseases Research Unit, National Institute of Medical Sciences and Nutrition Salvador Zubiran, Mexico City, Mexico.
Tecnologico de Monterrey, School of Medicine, Mexico City, Mexico.
BMC Med Educ. 2025 Jul 1;25(1):911. doi: 10.1186/s12909-025-07568-y.
The proportions of men and women in some residency programs have been unbalanced. In recent years, Mexican regulations surrounding the national standardized test for residency programs (ENARM) have changed, allowing applicants to choose their desired residency program after knowing their score (instead of before taking the exam). Since, on average, women are more risk-averse than men, we hypothesized that the new regulation may have influenced the proportion of women applying to competitive residency programs by letting them choose without the uncertainty of their future test performance. Additionally, we evaluated if the accuracy in predicting test performance differs between men and women studying Medicine.
We analyzed data from 452,079 medical residency applications (and their respective ENARM performance) between 2010 and 2022. Additionally, we evaluated self-predicted test performance accuracy in 266 students (of which 61.7% were medical students), which differed between men and students of different biomedical faculties (Nutrition, Psychology, and Biosciences). As part of our sensitivity analyses, we examined whether the perceived difficulty of the evaluated topic or its relevance to their future career plans affected their predictions and test performance.
The proportion of women in highly competitive residency programs significantly increased during the years when applicants chose their programs after seeing their scores. While both Men and Women studying Medicine were more competitive and scored higher than students in other Biomedical faculties, Men studying Medicine predicted higher test scores than their female counterparts despite their actual scores not being statistically different. In comparison with women, men had larger overestimation errors about their actual test performance, predicted they would rank higher than their class peers, and predicted higher test scores independently of how difficult they perceived the tested topic to be.
The percentage of women in highly competitive programs increased significantly when applicants chose their program after knowing their standardized test scores. Men studying Medicine overestimated their test performance vs. all other groups. Although their actual scores were not statistically different from those of women, men predicted higher test scores regardless of how difficult they perceived the evaluated topic to be or how relevant they thought it would be for their future career plans.
一些住院医师培训项目中的男女比例失衡。近年来,墨西哥围绕住院医师培训项目国家标准化考试(ENARM)的规定发生了变化,允许申请者在知道自己的分数后(而不是在考试前)选择他们想要的住院医师培训项目。由于平均而言,女性比男性更厌恶风险,我们推测新规定可能通过让女性在没有未来考试成绩不确定性的情况下进行选择,从而影响了申请竞争激烈的住院医师培训项目的女性比例。此外,我们评估了学习医学的男性和女性在预测考试成绩方面的准确性是否存在差异。
我们分析了2010年至2022年间452,079份医学住院医师申请数据(以及他们各自的ENARM成绩)。此外,我们评估了266名学生(其中61.7%是医学生)自我预测考试成绩的准确性,这些学生在男性和不同生物医学专业(营养学、心理学和生物科学)的学生之间存在差异。作为我们敏感性分析的一部分,我们研究了所评估主题的感知难度或其与未来职业规划的相关性是否会影响他们的预测和考试成绩。
在申请者根据成绩选择项目后的几年里,竞争激烈的住院医师培训项目中的女性比例显著增加。虽然学习医学的男性和女性都比其他生物医学专业的学生更具竞争力且得分更高,但学习医学的男性预测的考试成绩高于女性同龄人,尽管他们的实际成绩在统计学上没有差异。与女性相比,男性对自己实际考试成绩的高估误差更大,预测自己的排名会高于班级同学,并且无论他们认为测试主题有多难,都预测自己的考试成绩更高。
当申请者在知道标准化考试成绩后选择项目时,竞争激烈项目中的女性比例显著增加。学习医学的男性相对于所有其他群体高估了自己的考试成绩。尽管他们的实际成绩与女性没有统计学差异,但无论他们认为所评估的主题有多难或与他们未来的职业规划有多相关,男性都预测自己的考试成绩更高。