Exploring institutional stratification: Minority-serving institutional pathways to medical school acceptance in the United States.

IF 4.9 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Amanda K Burbage, Eushekia Y Hewitt
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Recruiting and training a diverse pool of physicians from historically excluded groups is vital to solving complex scientific problems and increasing access to patient care. Disparate educational and health outcomes of COVID-19 amplified this need. In stratified higher education systems, underfunded institutions that serve greater numbers of underrepresented in medicine (URM) students face unique barriers to entering physician training. However, pathways from historically underfunded minority-serving institutions (MSIs) in the United States to medical school (MD) are not well understood.

Method: A hierarchical logistic regression analysis of 328 488 de-identified applicants to US MD-granting medical schools for academic years 2017-2018 through 2022-2023 was used to determine predictors of acceptance based on MSI attendance compared to predominantly White institutions (PWI) and other literature-informed predictors. An interrupted time series analysis determined the significance in changes in observed differences in application acceptance before and after the COVID-19 pandemic.

Results: In model 1, MSI attendance was associated with significantly lower odds of acceptance, with a 42% to 52% chance of acceptance compared to PWI applicants. Adding MCAT and GPA significantly increased odds of acceptance for most MSI applicants in model 2. MSI attendance, MCAT, GPA and socio-economic status indicators were useful predictors, improving the acceptance model by 39% better than the null model. Although some predictors showed a change in odds over time, none changed significantly when comparing before and after COVID-19.

Discussion: MSI attending students were less likely to be admitted to MD programmes, highlighting systemic stratification until other academic factors were introduced to the model that alleviated lower odds, and the COVID-19 pandemic did not substantially change these trends. Improved pathways and strengthened institutional relationships between institutions that have greater proportions of underrepresented students and medical schools may help improve MSI applicant odds furthering diversity within the physician-trained workforce.

探索院校分层:美国医学院录取少数族裔服务机构的途径。
导言:从历来被排斥的群体中招募和培训多样化的医生人才库,对于解决复杂的科学问题和增加患者就医机会至关重要。COVID-19 在教育和健康方面的不同结果扩大了这一需求。在分层高等教育体系中,资金不足的院校为更多在医学领域代表性不足(URM)的学生提供服务,这些院校在进入医师培训领域时面临着独特的障碍。然而,人们对美国历来资金不足的少数族裔服务院校(MSIs)进入医学院(MD)的途径并不十分了解:方法:对2017-2018学年至2022-2023学年328 488名去身份化的美国医学博士授予医学院申请者进行了分层逻辑回归分析,以确定基于MSI入学率与白人占主导地位的院校(PWI)及其他文献信息预测因素的录取预测因素。一项间断时间序列分析确定了COVID-19大流行前后观察到的申请录取差异变化的显著性:在模型 1 中,MSI 入学率与较低的录取几率相关,与 PWI 申请人相比,录取几率为 42% 至 52%。在模型 2 中,加入 MCAT 和 GPA 可显著提高大多数 MSI 申请者的录取几率。MSI 出勤率、MCAT、GPA 和社会经济地位指标是有用的预测指标,比空模型提高了 39% 的录取模型。虽然一些预测指标随着时间的推移在几率上有所变化,但在 COVID-19 前后的比较中,没有任何指标发生显著变化:讨论:就读 MSI 的学生被医学博士课程录取的可能性较低,这凸显了系统性分层,直到其他学术因素被引入模型,缓解了较低的几率,COVID-19 大流行并没有实质性地改变这些趋势。改善途径并加强拥有更多代表性不足学生的院校与医学院之间的机构关系,可能有助于提高 MSI 申请人的几率,从而进一步促进医生培训队伍的多样性。
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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来源期刊
Medical Education
Medical Education 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
279
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical Education seeks to be the pre-eminent journal in the field of education for health care professionals, and publishes material of the highest quality, reflecting world wide or provocative issues and perspectives. The journal welcomes high quality papers on all aspects of health professional education including; -undergraduate education -postgraduate training -continuing professional development -interprofessional education
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