Molly Estes, Jacob Garcia, Ronnie Ren, Mark Olaf, Shannon Moffett, Michael Galuska, Xiao Chi Zhang
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Our goal was to perform a qualitative analysis of students' EM program experiences through a publicly available AOC.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>This was a qualitative analysis of a publicly available, time-stamped, user-locked AOC dataset: \"Official 2020-2021 Emergency Medicine Applicant Spreadsheet.\" We extracted and then de-identified all data from selected sub-sheets entitled \"Virtual Interview Impressions\" and \"Rotation Impressions.\" Four investigators used constant comparative method to analyze the data inductively, and they subsequently met to generate common themes discussed by students. Preliminary thematic analysis was conducted on a random sample of 37/183 (20%) independent narratives to create the initial codebook. This was used and updated iteratively to analyze the entire narrative set consisting of 841 discrete statements. Finally, two unique codes were created to distinguish whether the identified sub-themes, or program attributes, were likely \"modifiable\" or \"non-modifiable.\"</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>We identified six major themes: living and working conditions; interpersonal relationships; learning experiences, postgraduate readiness, and online/virtual supplements. Common sub-themes included patient population (13%); resident personality (7%); program leadership personality (7%); relationship with faculty/leadership (6%); geography (4%); practice setting (4%); program reputation (4%), and postgraduate year-3 experiences (4%). Modifiable sub-themes outnumbered non-modifiable sub-themes, 60.7% to 39.3%.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>In this analysis of selected medical students' narratives in an AOC, the majority of identified themes represented topics that may serve as external feedback for EM residency programs and their clerkships. Selective use of AOCs may set a precedent for future program assessments by applicants and inform program leadership of important programmatic elements in the eyes of applicants. 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Despite this, robust EM AOCs exist, with large user bases and heavy readership. Insights about applicants' authentic experiences can be critical for applicants and program leadership decision-making. To date, there are no EM studies to qualitatively assess EM AOC narratives during the application cycle. Our goal was to perform a qualitative analysis of students' EM program experiences through a publicly available AOC.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>This was a qualitative analysis of a publicly available, time-stamped, user-locked AOC dataset: \\\"Official 2020-2021 Emergency Medicine Applicant Spreadsheet.\\\" We extracted and then de-identified all data from selected sub-sheets entitled \\\"Virtual Interview Impressions\\\" and \\\"Rotation Impressions.\\\" Four investigators used constant comparative method to analyze the data inductively, and they subsequently met to generate common themes discussed by students. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:急诊医学(EM)学术界一直将 Reddit 等匿名在线社区(AOC)或特定专业的 "申请者电子表格 "视为糟糕的咨询资源。尽管如此,仍然存在着强大的急诊医学 AOC,它们拥有庞大的用户群和大量的读者。了解申请者的真实经历对申请者和项目领导决策至关重要。迄今为止,还没有任何关于在申请周期内对 EM AOC 叙述进行定性评估的 EM 研究。我们的目标是通过公开的AOC对学生的EM项目经历进行定性分析:这是对一个公开的、有时间戳的、用户锁定的 AOC 数据集进行的定性分析:"2020-2021年急诊医学申请官方电子表格"。我们从选定的 "虚拟面试印象 "和 "轮转印象 "子表中提取了所有数据,然后进行了去标识化处理。四名调查人员采用不断比较法对数据进行归纳分析,随后他们开会讨论学生们讨论的共同主题。对 37/183 份(20%)独立叙述中的随机样本进行了初步主题分析,以创建初始代码集。在分析由 841 个离散语句组成的整个叙述集时,使用并反复更新了该编码集。最后,我们创建了两个独特的代码,以区分所确定的次主题或计划属性是 "可修改 "还是 "不可修改":我们确定了六大主题:生活和工作条件;人际关系;学习经历;毕业后的准备情况;在线/虚拟补充。常见的次主题包括:患者群体(13%);住院医师个性(7%);项目领导个性(7%);与教师/领导的关系(6%);地理位置(4%);实践环境(4%);项目声誉(4%)以及研究生第三年的经历(4%)。可修改子主题的比例为 60.7%:39.3%:在对选定的医学生在 AOC 中的叙述进行的分析中,大部分已确定的主题代表了可作为 EM 住院医师培训项目及其实习的外部反馈的主题。有选择性地使用AOC可能会为申请者未来的项目评估开创先例,并让项目领导了解申请者眼中重要的项目要素。它阐明了他们与项目互动或学习经历中的重要主题,并为以学习者为中心的项目改进创造了机会。
Analysis of Anonymous Student Narratives About Experiences with Emergency Medicine Residency Programs.
Background: Academic emergency medicine (EM) communities have viewed anonymous online communities (AOC) such as Reddit or specialty-specific "applicant spreadsheets" as poor advising resources. Despite this, robust EM AOCs exist, with large user bases and heavy readership. Insights about applicants' authentic experiences can be critical for applicants and program leadership decision-making. To date, there are no EM studies to qualitatively assess EM AOC narratives during the application cycle. Our goal was to perform a qualitative analysis of students' EM program experiences through a publicly available AOC.
Methods: This was a qualitative analysis of a publicly available, time-stamped, user-locked AOC dataset: "Official 2020-2021 Emergency Medicine Applicant Spreadsheet." We extracted and then de-identified all data from selected sub-sheets entitled "Virtual Interview Impressions" and "Rotation Impressions." Four investigators used constant comparative method to analyze the data inductively, and they subsequently met to generate common themes discussed by students. Preliminary thematic analysis was conducted on a random sample of 37/183 (20%) independent narratives to create the initial codebook. This was used and updated iteratively to analyze the entire narrative set consisting of 841 discrete statements. Finally, two unique codes were created to distinguish whether the identified sub-themes, or program attributes, were likely "modifiable" or "non-modifiable."
Results: We identified six major themes: living and working conditions; interpersonal relationships; learning experiences, postgraduate readiness, and online/virtual supplements. Common sub-themes included patient population (13%); resident personality (7%); program leadership personality (7%); relationship with faculty/leadership (6%); geography (4%); practice setting (4%); program reputation (4%), and postgraduate year-3 experiences (4%). Modifiable sub-themes outnumbered non-modifiable sub-themes, 60.7% to 39.3%.
Conclusion: In this analysis of selected medical students' narratives in an AOC, the majority of identified themes represented topics that may serve as external feedback for EM residency programs and their clerkships. Selective use of AOCs may set a precedent for future program assessments by applicants and inform program leadership of important programmatic elements in the eyes of applicants. It elucidates important themes in their interactions or learning experiences with programs and creates opportunities for learner-centric program improvement.
期刊介绍:
WestJEM focuses on how the systems and delivery of emergency care affects health, health disparities, and health outcomes in communities and populations worldwide, including the impact of social conditions on the composition of patients seeking care in emergency departments.