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A Qualitative, Cross-Sectional Study of Positive and Negative Comments of Residency Programs Across 9 Medical and Surgical Specialties. | LitMetric

A Qualitative, Cross-Sectional Study of Positive and Negative Comments of Residency Programs Across 9 Medical and Surgical Specialties.

Am J Med

Department of Dermatology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Ill; Center for Bio-Integrated Electronics, Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. Electronic address:

Published: September 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Residency applicants leverage social media to share their experiences with various training programs, which can help medical educators better connect with and meet the expectations of future residents.
  • A qualitative analysis of unstructured social media data from residency applicants between 2007 and 2017 identified key themes in their comments, revealing that 4541 were positive and 1773 were negative.
  • The study found that institutional factors were frequently mentioned, with geography being a dominant theme, highlighting the importance of city-related attributes like cost of living and commute in applicants' perceptions.

Article Abstract

Importance: Residency applicants often use social media to discuss the positive and negative features of prospective training programs. An examination of the content discussed by applicants could provide guidance for how a medical education faculty can better engage with prospective trainees and adapt to meet the educational expectations of a new generation of digital-native physicians.

Objective: The objective was to identify unstructured social media data submitted by residency applicants and categorize positive and negative statements to determine key themes.

Design: The study design was qualitative analysis of a retrospective cohort.

Setting: Publicly available datasets were used.

Participants: The participants were anonymized medical trainees applying to residency training positions in 9 specialties-dermatology, general surgery, internal medicine, obstetrics/gynecology, plastic surgery, otolaryngology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, pediatrics, and radiology-from 2007 to 2017.

Main Outcomes And Measures: After we developed a standardized coding scheme that broke comments down into major features, themes, and subthemes, all unstructured comments were coded by two independent researchers. Positive and negative comments were coded separately. Frequency counts and percentages were recorded for each identified feature, theme, and subtheme. The percent positive and negative comments by specialty were also calculated.

Results: Of the 6314 comments identified, 4541 were positive and 1773 were negative. Institution was the most commonly cited major feature in both the positive (n = 767 [17%]) and negative (n = 827 [47%]) comments. Geography was the most cited theme, and City, Cost of Living, and Commute were commonly cited subthemes. Training was the next most cited major feature in both positive (n = 1005 [22%]) and negative (n = 291 [16%]) comments, with Clinical Training being more commonly cited compared to Research Opportunities. Overall, 72% of comments from all were positive; however, the percent of comments that were positive comments varied significantly across the 9 specialties. Pediatrics (65%), dermatology (66%), and internal medicine (68%) applicants were more likely to express negative comments compared with the global average, but physical medicine and rehabilitation (85%), radiology (82%), otolaryngology (81%), and plastic surgery (80%) applicants were more likely to express positive comments.

Conclusions And Relevance: This qualitative analysis of positive and negative themes as posted by applicants in recent matching years is the first and provides new detailed insights into the motivations and desires of trainees.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amjmed.2018.05.019DOI Listing

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