Who Bears the Burden? Understanding the Socioeconomic Patterns of Educational Debt in Orthopaedic Surgery Residency Candidates

Andrew B. Harris, Eli M. Snyder, Ashish Vankara, Julius K. Oni, Dawn LaPorte, A. Aiyer
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(3) After controlling for relevant confounding variables, are individuals classified as an underrepresented minority or those with educational debt and socioeconomic disadvantage less likely to match in orthopaedic surgery?\n \n \n \n A retrospective evaluation of orthopaedic surgery residency application data from the American Association of Medical Colleges was analyzed from 2011 to 2021. The American Association of Medical Colleges database was selected because every residency applicant must register and apply through the American Association of Medical Colleges. Therefore, these data exist for every residency applicant, and the sample was comprehensive. Self-reported data including premedical, medical, and total educational debt burden as well as classification as socioeconomically disadvantaged and application fee waiver use were collected. Applicants were dichotomously categorized as an underrepresented minority or a not underrepresented minority based upon self-identified race and ethnicity. Monetary values were reported in USD and inflation-adjusted to 2021 using the Consumer Price Index. We performed t-tests and chi-square tests for continuous and categorical variables, respectively. Significance was considered at p < 0.05. In all, 12,112 applicants were available in the initial cohort, and 67% (8170 of 12,112) of applicants with complete data were included from 2011 to 2021 in the final study cohort. Of these, 18% (1510 of 8170) were women, 14% (1114 of 8170) were classified as underrepresented minorities, and 8% (643 of 8170) were classified as socioeconomically disadvantaged. Sixty-one percent (4969 of 8170) of applicants reported receiving at least one scholarship, 34% (2746 of 8170) had premedical school debt, and 72% (5909 of 8170) had any educational debt including medical school. Among all applicants, the median (IQR) educational debt was USD 197,000 (25,000 to 288,000). Among those with scholarships, the median amount was USD 25,000 (9000 to 86,000).\n \n \n \n After controlling for the potentially confounding variables of gender and socioeconomic disadvantage, classification as an underrepresented minority applicant was independently associated with higher scholarship amounts than applicants characterized as not underrepresented minorities (β = USD 20,908 [95% confidence interval (CI) 15,395 to 26,422]; p < 0.001), whereas underrepresented minority classification was not independently associated with a difference in total educational debt (β = USD 3719 [95% CI -6458 to 13,895]; p = 0.47). After controlling for the potentially confounding variables of gender and classification as an underrepresented minority, socioeconomic disadvantage was independently associated with higher scholarship amounts (β = USD 20,341 [95% CI 13,300 to 27,382]; p < 0.001) and higher total educational debt (β = USD 66,162 [95% CI 53,318 to 79,006]; p < 0.001) than applicants not classified as socioeconomically disadvantaged. After controlling for the potentially confounding variables of gender and classification as an underrepresented minority, socioeconomic disadvantage was independently associated with decreased match rates (OR 0.62 [95% CI 0.52 to 0.74]; p < 0.001).\n \n \n \n These findings underscore the need for comprehensive scholarship initiatives to ensure equitable financial accessibility for applicants from all backgrounds.\n \n \n \n In the future, orthopaedic surgery may benefit from research comparing the effectiveness of various initiatives aiming to improve fairness in the burden of debt among applicants to orthopaedic surgery residency programs.\n","PeriodicalId":115399,"journal":{"name":"Clinical Orthopaedics &amp; Related Research","volume":"37 7","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Clinical Orthopaedics &amp; Related Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1097/corr.0000000000003068","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Educational debt is commonly observed among applicants to orthopaedic surgery residency programs; however, an understanding of the debt burden among minority and nonminority applicants is not well established. Thus, this study aimed to fill these knowledge gaps by examining the extent of and factors shaping educational debt among orthopaedic surgery applicants. (1) What is the educational debt burden among orthopaedic surgery residency applicants? (2) After controlling for relevant confounding variables, what factors are independently associated with increasing levels of educational debt? (3) After controlling for relevant confounding variables, are individuals classified as an underrepresented minority or those with educational debt and socioeconomic disadvantage less likely to match in orthopaedic surgery? A retrospective evaluation of orthopaedic surgery residency application data from the American Association of Medical Colleges was analyzed from 2011 to 2021. The American Association of Medical Colleges database was selected because every residency applicant must register and apply through the American Association of Medical Colleges. Therefore, these data exist for every residency applicant, and the sample was comprehensive. Self-reported data including premedical, medical, and total educational debt burden as well as classification as socioeconomically disadvantaged and application fee waiver use were collected. Applicants were dichotomously categorized as an underrepresented minority or a not underrepresented minority based upon self-identified race and ethnicity. Monetary values were reported in USD and inflation-adjusted to 2021 using the Consumer Price Index. We performed t-tests and chi-square tests for continuous and categorical variables, respectively. Significance was considered at p < 0.05. In all, 12,112 applicants were available in the initial cohort, and 67% (8170 of 12,112) of applicants with complete data were included from 2011 to 2021 in the final study cohort. Of these, 18% (1510 of 8170) were women, 14% (1114 of 8170) were classified as underrepresented minorities, and 8% (643 of 8170) were classified as socioeconomically disadvantaged. Sixty-one percent (4969 of 8170) of applicants reported receiving at least one scholarship, 34% (2746 of 8170) had premedical school debt, and 72% (5909 of 8170) had any educational debt including medical school. Among all applicants, the median (IQR) educational debt was USD 197,000 (25,000 to 288,000). Among those with scholarships, the median amount was USD 25,000 (9000 to 86,000). After controlling for the potentially confounding variables of gender and socioeconomic disadvantage, classification as an underrepresented minority applicant was independently associated with higher scholarship amounts than applicants characterized as not underrepresented minorities (β = USD 20,908 [95% confidence interval (CI) 15,395 to 26,422]; p < 0.001), whereas underrepresented minority classification was not independently associated with a difference in total educational debt (β = USD 3719 [95% CI -6458 to 13,895]; p = 0.47). After controlling for the potentially confounding variables of gender and classification as an underrepresented minority, socioeconomic disadvantage was independently associated with higher scholarship amounts (β = USD 20,341 [95% CI 13,300 to 27,382]; p < 0.001) and higher total educational debt (β = USD 66,162 [95% CI 53,318 to 79,006]; p < 0.001) than applicants not classified as socioeconomically disadvantaged. After controlling for the potentially confounding variables of gender and classification as an underrepresented minority, socioeconomic disadvantage was independently associated with decreased match rates (OR 0.62 [95% CI 0.52 to 0.74]; p < 0.001). These findings underscore the need for comprehensive scholarship initiatives to ensure equitable financial accessibility for applicants from all backgrounds. In the future, orthopaedic surgery may benefit from research comparing the effectiveness of various initiatives aiming to improve fairness in the burden of debt among applicants to orthopaedic surgery residency programs.
谁在承受负担?了解矫形外科住院医师候选人教育债务的社会经济模式
在骨科外科住院医师项目的申请者中,教育债务是常见现象;然而,对少数族裔和非少数族裔申请者债务负担的了解并不十分清楚。因此,本研究旨在通过考察骨科手术申请者中教育债务的程度和影响因素来填补这些知识空白。 (1)骨科住院医师申请者的教育债务负担如何?(2) 在控制了相关混杂变量后,哪些因素与教育债务水平的增加独立相关? (3) 在控制了相关混杂变量后,被归类为代表性不足的少数群体或有教育债务和社会经济劣势的人是否不太可能匹配骨科手术? 我们对美国医学院协会 2011 年至 2021 年的骨科外科住院医师申请数据进行了回顾性评估分析。之所以选择美国医学院校协会数据库,是因为每位住院医师申请人都必须通过美国医学院校协会进行注册和申请。因此,每个住院医师申请者都有这些数据,样本也很全面。收集的自我报告数据包括医学预科、医学和总教育债务负担,以及社会经济弱势分类和申请费减免使用情况。申请者根据自我认定的种族和民族,被二分法归类为代表性不足的少数民族或代表性不足的非少数民族。货币价值以美元为单位,并使用消费者价格指数对 2021 年的通货膨胀进行了调整。我们对连续变量和分类变量分别进行了 t 检验和卡方检验。显著性以 p < 0.05 为标准。初始队列中共有 12112 名申请人,其中 67%(12112 人中的 8170 人)拥有完整数据的申请人被纳入 2011 年至 2021 年的最终研究队列。其中,18%(8170 人中的 1510 人)为女性,14%(8170 人中的 1114 人)被归类为代表性不足的少数族裔,8%(8170 人中的 643 人)被归类为社会经济弱势群体。61%的申请者(8170 人中有 4969 人)称至少获得过一次奖学金,34% 的申请者(8170 人中有 2746 人)有医学院预科债务,72% 的申请者(8170 人中有 5909 人)有包括医学院在内的任何教育债务。在所有申请者中,教育债务的中位数(IQR)为 19.7 万美元(2.5 万至 28.8 万美元)。在获得奖学金的申请者中,中位数为 25,000 美元(9000 至 86,000 美元)。 在控制了性别和社会经济劣势等可能的混杂变量后,被归类为代表性不足的少数族裔的申请者的奖学金金额高于被归类为非代表性不足的少数族裔的申请者(β = 20,908 美元 [95% 置信区间 (CI) 15,395 到 26,422]; p < 0.001),而代表性不足的少数族裔的归类与教育债务总额的差异无独立关联(β = 3719 美元 [95% CI -6458 到 13,895]; p = 0.47)。在控制了性别和是否属于代表性不足的少数民族这两个可能的混杂变量后,与未被归类为社会经济弱势的申请者相比,社会经济弱势独立地与较高的奖学金金额(β = 20,341 美元 [95% CI 13,300 至 27,382]; p < 0.001)和较高的教育债务总额(β = 66,162 美元 [95% CI 53,318 至 79,006]; p < 0.001)相关。在控制了性别和被归类为代表性不足的少数群体这两个可能造成混淆的变量后,社会经济劣势与匹配率下降存在独立关联(OR 0.62 [95% CI 0.52 to 0.74];p < 0.001)。 这些研究结果表明,有必要采取全面的奖学金措施,以确保来自各种背景的申请者都能获得公平的经济资助。 未来,矫形外科可能会受益于旨在改善矫形外科住院医师项目申请者债务负担公平性的各种措施的有效性比较研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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