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Residency selection Who to take?
Who not to take….. Jack Choueka, MD Chairman/Program Director Maimonides Medical Center Brooklyn, NY
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Disclosures Reviewer – JHS Speaker – Xiaflex Instructor - Synthes
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Easier to get rid of your spouse than a resident
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7% of all matched residents require substantial remediation or dismissal from residency training
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Taking the wrong resident
Decrease morale Decrease work efficiency Patient care Faculty disillusionment Adverse effect on recruitment
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Who would you take??
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Local 245 AOA Good research No rotation OK Interview Great letters Regional 230 Not AOA Some research Great rotation Great Interview Bad Eval in OB/GYN Distant 275 No research Good Interview Bland letters
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ERAS Education History Work/Volunteer/Research Experience USMLE Scores
Personal Statement Letters of Recommendation (LOR) Deans Letter Transcript AOA, Honors, Awards Other Factors: felonies, couples match, military obligation, citizenship/Visa requirements
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What we do Set filters (med school, board scores)
Assign reviewers who actually will read the applications Each application reviewed by at least 2 reviewers Offer interviews when consensus occurs
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AOA Steering Committee
Cognitive skills Motor Ability Affective domain
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AOA Steering Committee
Cognitive skills = Pass boards Motor Ability = Can operate Affective domain = Won’t torture you
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Evidence Based??
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USLME Poor correlation with clinical skill acquisition
Correlates only when outcome is another multiple choice test McGaghie et al. “Are the USMLE Step 1 and 2 Scores Valid Measures of Postgraduate Medical Residency Selection Decisions?” Acad Med. 2011; 86:48-52.
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Professionalism Determine whether standardized admissions data in ERAS were associated with assessments of professionalism Comparative statements in LORs (p=.002). Cullen, et al. “Selection Criteria for IM Residency Applicants and Professionalism Ratings During Internship”. Mayo Clin Proc. 2011; 86(3):
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Orthopaedic Specific Research
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No faculty consensus about ranking of residents upon graduation
“Resident Selection: how are we doing and why?” Thordarson, et al. Clinical Orthopedics and Related Research 2007 Fair/poor correlations noted between residents’ initial and graduation rankings No faculty consensus about ranking of residents upon graduation
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Dirschl et al. “Resident selection and predictors of performance: can we be evidence based?” Clinical Orthopedics and Related Research 2006 Objective: To determine if an academic score, using objective elements only, will discriminate among applicants and correlate with resident outcomes Conclusion: Calculating academic score makes application screening process more objective does not appear to correlate with outcomes of the training program
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Affective Domain Rated as high importance for PD’s
Correlates with number of medical school honors (Dirschl 2002)
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Predictors of Residency Success
Charitable involvement Varsity sports – selection to chief resident (Spitzer et al HJD 2009)
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Summary No real consensus on good predictors
Outcome measures vary among studies Faculty evaluations too inconsistent Program specific
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Milestones may provide more universal outcome measures
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My Reality Most residents pass their boards
Most residents will make you proud Even the difficult ones find their way
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….But I need to get through the day
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Program Fit Hospital’s culture Know your faculty Resident environment
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Hospital Culture Patient mix Languages Other residency programs
Hospital perception of residents Institutional opportunities
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Faculty Clinical vs. Academic Teaching style Specific mentor
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Your Residents Which ones thrive Hierarchy Diversity
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Our culture Highly diverse patients pop. 73 languages Extreme VIPism
Large residencies in other specialties with large numbers of IMG’s Residents Included at many administrative levels Small busy program = cross coverage
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Traits we look for Leadership Independent Teaching ability
Team players Inspirational Ethical Potential faculty
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Past experience determines future performance
Know the traits you want Ask for specifics Let them do the talking
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80% of US applicants Match
They pick you more than you pick them
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The match curve Program Top Middle Bottom Middle Bottom Top Applicant
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The match curve Program Top Middle Bottom Middle Bottom Top Applicant
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The match curve Program Top Middle Bottom Middle Bottom Top Applicant
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The match curve Program Top Middle Bottom Middle Bottom Top Applicant
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Things that tip your position on the match curve
Program size Academic affiliations Location Institutional viability High turnover of faculty Unhappy residents Disorganized selection process
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Improve your position Respect the candidates Good communication
Prepared for interviews Engaged faculty and residents Lunch Interview reception Website/social media
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Making the rank list
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Develop ranking system
Be consistent Rankers Criteria Include residents in interview
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The Shoe-in Tend to move down the list If you want them take them
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The overqualified candidate
Would you take them without the resume Do they have passion for the program Same qualities that make them overqualified probably makes them adapt
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Board Scores Decide on minimum requirement and don’t look back
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Call references
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Most important rank Last one on the list
Would rather have that person than nobody
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What if you don’t fill Don’t panic Plenty of good applicants
Take your time Review applicants Mini interview session Listen to references
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Thank You
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