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Residency selection Who to take?

Residency selection Who to take?. Who not to take…. Jack Choueka, MD Chairman/Program Director Maimonides Medical Center Brooklyn, NY. Disclosures. Reviewer – JHS Speaker – Xiaflex Instructor - Synthes. Easier to get rid of your spouse than a resident.

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Residency selection Who to take?

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  1. Residency selectionWho to take? Who not to take….. Jack Choueka, MD Chairman/Program Director Maimonides Medical Center Brooklyn, NY

  2. Disclosures • Reviewer – JHS • Speaker – Xiaflex • Instructor - Synthes

  3. Easier to get rid of your spouse than a resident

  4. 7% of all matched residents require substantial remediation or dismissal from residency training

  5. Taking the wrong resident • Decrease morale • Decrease work efficiency • Patient care • Faculty disillusionment • Adverse effect on recruitment

  6. Who would you take??

  7. Regional • 230 • Not AOA • Some research • Great rotation • Great Interview • Bad Eval in OB/GYN • Local • 245 • AOA • Good research • No rotation • OK Interview • Great letters • Distant • 275 • AOA • No research • No rotation • Good Interview • Bland letters

  8. 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

  9. 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

  10. AOA Steering Committee • Cognitive skills • Motor Ability • Affective domain

  11. AOA Steering Committee • Cognitive skills = Pass boards • Motor Ability = Can operate • Affective domain = Won’t torture you

  12. Evidence Based??

  13. 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.

  14. 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):197-202.

  15. Orthopaedic Specific Research

  16. “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

  17. Dirschl et al. “Resident selection and predictors of performance: can we be evidencebased?” 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

  18. Affective Domain • Rated as high importance for PD’s • Correlates with number of medical school honors (Dirschl 2002)

  19. Predictors of Residency Success • Charitable involvement • Varsity sports – selection to chief resident • (Spitzer et al HJD 2009)

  20. Summary • No real consensus on good predictors • Outcome measures vary among studies • Faculty evaluations too inconsistent • Program specific

  21. Milestones may provide more universal outcome measures

  22. My Reality • Most residents pass their boards • Most residents will make you proud • Even the difficult ones find their way

  23. ….But I need to get through the day

  24. Program Fit • Hospital’s culture • Know your faculty • Resident environment

  25. Hospital Culture • Patient mix • Languages • Other residency programs • Hospital perception of residents • Institutional opportunities

  26. Faculty • Clinical vs. Academic • Teaching style • Specific mentor

  27. Your Residents • Which ones thrive • Hierarchy • Diversity

  28. 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

  29. Traits we look for • Leadership • Independent • Teaching ability • Team players • Inspirational • Ethical • Potential faculty

  30. Past experience determines future performance • Know the traits you want • Ask for specifics • Let them do the talking

  31. 80% of US applicants Match • They pick you more than you pick them

  32. Program Top Middle Bottom The match curve Middle Bottom Top Applicant

  33. Program Top Middle Bottom The match curve Middle Bottom Top Applicant

  34. Program Top Middle Bottom The match curve Middle Bottom Top Applicant

  35. Program Top Middle Bottom The match curve Middle Bottom Top Applicant

  36. 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

  37. Improve your position • Respect the candidates • Good communication • Prepared for interviews • Engaged faculty and residents • Lunch • Interview reception • Website/social media

  38. Making the rank list

  39. Develop ranking system • Be consistent • Rankers • Criteria • Include residents in interview

  40. The Shoe-in • Tend to move down the list • If you want them take them

  41. 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

  42. Board Scores • Decide on minimum requirement and don’t look back

  43. Call references

  44. Most important rank • Last one on the list • Would rather have that person than nobody

  45. 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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