申请人性别对肺部和重症医学奖学金推荐信的影响:一项多站点研究。

IF 1.9 Q3 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
ATS scholar Pub Date : 2025-03-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-14 DOI:10.34197/ats-scholar.2024-0074OC
Kaitland M Byrd, Michelle Spiegel, Edward F Kilb, Kelly Vranas, Liana Schweiger, Kathleen T Lee, Julia Schroeder, Alexandra Vita, Gareema Agarwal, Irada Choudhuri, Ishita Sunita Arora, Nandini Sarma, Snigdha Jain, Kathleen M Akgün, Janae K Heath, Elizabeth M Viglianti
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:推荐信(LORs)对奖学金申请至关重要,但隐性偏见会影响其质量。目的:本研究的目的是探讨多机构肺部和重症监护医学(PCCM)奖学金LORs的性别差异。方法:对提交给美国5个地区项目(南部、中西部、东部、东北部和西部)的所有2021年PCCM奖学金申请进行识别,并对申请人的人口统计数据和成就进行摘要。写信人的性别是通过在线搜索专业网站确定的。使用语言调查和字数统计来确定形容词类型(例如,grindstone, communal)的频率。我们测量了申请人性别与总字数和支持度结果之间的关联,使用多变量线性回归模型调整了申请人人口统计学,成就和每个项目的写信人性别。结果:9153例LORs被纳入分析。大多数申请者(64.1% [n = 1,703 / 2,658])是男性,大多数写信者(72.1% [n = 6,603 / 9,152])是男性。在调整了申请人的人口统计、成就和写信者的性别后,五个项目中有三个项目(中西部,多2.4个单词),女性申请人的LORs比男性申请人的LORs有更多的支持性词汇。p = 0.01];南方,增加1.9个单词[95% CI, 0.1-3.6;p = 0.03];东北地区,增加2.5个单词[95% CI, 0.2-4.9;P = 0.04])和较长的字母(南方,多40.1个单词[95% CI, 12.3-68.0;p = 0.005];中西部地区,增加29.8个单词[95% CI, 0.7-58.9;p = 0.045])。结论:PCCM奖学金申请人LORs的长度和支持度因申请人性别和地区而异。进一步的工作应该探讨这些差异存在的原因,以及奖学金评选委员会如何看待从中获得的信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Impact of Applicant Sex on Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Fellowship Letters of Recommendation: A Multisite Study.

Background: Letters of recommendation (LORs) are crucial for fellowship applications, but implicit biases can affect their quality. Objective: The aim of this study was to examine sex-based differences among multiinstitutional pulmonary and critical care medicine (PCCM) fellowship LORs. Methods: All 2021 PCCM fellowship applications submitted to five regional U.S. programs (South, Midwest, East, Northeast, and West) were deidentified, and applicant demographics and accomplishments were abstracted. The letter writer's gender was identified through an online search of professional websites. Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count was used to identify the frequency of adjective types (e.g., grindstone, communal). We measured the associations between applicant sex and the outcomes of total word count and degree of support using multivariable linear regression models adjusting for applicant demographics, accomplishments, and letter writer's gender for each program. Results: In total, 9,153 LORs were included in the analysis. The majority of applicants (64.1% [n = 1,703 of 2,658]) were male, and most letter writers (72.1% [n = 6,603 of 9,152]) identified as men. When adjusting for applicant demographics and accomplishments and letter writer's gender, female applicants' LORs had significantly more supportive words compared with those of male applicants in three of the five programs (Midwest, 2.4 more words [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.5-4.3; P = 0.01]; South, 1.9 more words [95% CI, 0.1-3.6; P = 0.03]; Northeast, 2.5 more words [95% CI, 0.2-4.9; P = 0.04]) and longer letters in two programs (South, 40.1 more words [95% CI, 12.3-68.0; P = 0.005]; Midwest, 29.8 more words [95% CI, 0.7-58.9; P = 0.045]). Conclusion: The length and supportiveness of PCCM fellowship applicants' LORs varied by applicant sex and region. Further work should explore why these differences exist and how the information garnered from them is viewed by fellowship selection committees.

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