Orphan Applicants in Plastic Surgery: Where Do Medical Students Without an Affiliated Residency Program Match?

Eplasty Pub Date : 2022-06-20 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01
Shawhin Rostam Kadivar Shahriari, Cees Whisonant, Amanda Ederle, Gregory Borah
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Abstract

Background: The number of resident positions in integrated plastic surgery residencies are relatively few and highly sought after. Medical students interested in plastic surgery as a career are faced with the challenge of deciding where to apply for these highly competitive spots. This sense of keen competition means students are often applying to almost all available programs across the country with the idea of increasing their chance of successfully matching. Previous research has shown that exposure to specialty programs in medical school portends enhanced success in residency matches. This study focuses on medical students who come from schools without plastic surgery residencies-orphans-and the characteristics of those who successfully matched into integrated plastic surgery programs.

Methods: This study evaluated trends in successfully matched applicants in integrated plastic surgery residencies from 2016-2021 by looking at applicants' medical school type, presence of plastic surgery residency associated with the medical school, and geographic region. Geographic region of residency programs, medical school of applicants, and national quality ranking of medical schools were correlated with applicant demographics. The data were tabulated and analyzed utilizing chi-square analysis.

Results: Orphans who graduated from allopathic medical schools without an affiliated integrated plastic surgery residency program comprised 24.4% of successfully matched applicants, whereas those with affiliated integrated residency programs comprised 72.2%. However, at the top quartile of prestige-rated residency programs, these orphan applicants only comprised 17.4% of residents. Of all medical school applicants, 18.2% matched at a residency program affiliated with their medical school (P = 0.04). Annually, 1 to 3 osteopathic medical school graduates and 3 to 9 international medical graduates matched, representing less than 1 and 4%, respectively, of all matched applicants; these applicants had the least successful match rates.

Conclusions: There continues to be a modest number of successfully matched integrated plastic surgery residents who are graduates of allopathic medical schools with no affiliated residency program but disproportionately fewer at the top quartile institutions. There are also very few osteopathic and international medical school graduates who match, which has seen no significant change over the last 6 years.

Abstract Image

整形外科的孤儿申请者:没有附属住院医师项目的医学生在哪里匹配?
背景:综合整形外科住院医师的数量相对较少,并且受到高度追捧。对整形外科感兴趣的医学生面临着一个挑战,他们要决定去哪里申请这些竞争激烈的职位。这种激烈的竞争意味着学生们通常会申请全国几乎所有可用的课程,以增加他们成功匹配的机会。先前的研究表明,在医学院学习专业课程预示着住院医师匹配的成功率会提高。本研究的重点是来自没有整形外科住院医师的学校的医学生——孤儿——以及那些成功匹配到综合整形外科项目的人的特征。方法:本研究通过查看申请人的医学院类型、与医学院相关的整形外科住院医师的存在以及地理区域,评估了2016-2021年综合整形外科住院医师成功匹配申请人的趋势。住院医师项目的地理区域、申请人的医学院和医学院的国家质量排名与申请人的人口统计学相关。将数据制成表格并采用卡方分析进行分析。结果:毕业于对抗疗法医学院而没有附属综合整形外科住院医师项目的孤儿占成功匹配申请人的24.4%,而附属综合整形外科住院医师项目的孤儿占72.2%。然而,在排名靠前的住院医师项目中,这些孤儿申请人只占住院医师的17.4%。在所有医学院申请者中,18.2%的人与医学院附属的住院医师项目相匹配(P = 0.04)。每年有1至3名骨科医学院毕业生和3至9名国际医学毕业生匹配,分别占所有匹配申请人的不到1%和4%;这些申请者的匹配成功率最低。结论:仍然有一定数量的成功匹配的综合整形外科住院医师,他们毕业于对抗疗法医学院,没有附属的住院医师计划,但在前四分之一的机构中比例不成比例地少。也很少有骨科和国际医学院的毕业生能匹配,这在过去的6年里没有明显的变化。
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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