The Declining Residency Applicant Pool: A Multi-Institutional Medical Student Survey to Identify Precipitating Factors

Purpose: The purpose of our study was to better understand and identify concerns that may be responsible for the declining radiation oncology (RO) residency applicant pool. Methods and Materials: All RO residency programs affiliated with a US medical school were asked to participate in the study sur...

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Main Authors: Trudy C. Wu, MD, Susan A. McCloskey, MD, Paul E. Wallner, DO, Michael L. Steinberg, MD, Ann C. Raldow, MD, MPH
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Advances in Radiation Oncology
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2452109420302992
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spelling doaj-fcab5384b8924da4a2f8575bbf4ca8c62021-02-15T04:14:20ZengElsevierAdvances in Radiation Oncology2452-10942021-01-0161100597The Declining Residency Applicant Pool: A Multi-Institutional Medical Student Survey to Identify Precipitating FactorsTrudy C. Wu, MD0Susan A. McCloskey, MD1Paul E. Wallner, DO2Michael L. Steinberg, MD3Ann C. Raldow, MD, MPH4Department of Radiation Oncology, University of California, Los Angeles, California; Corresponding author: Trudy Wu, MDDepartment of Radiation Oncology, University of California, Los Angeles, California21st Century Oncology, Inc, Ft. Myers, Florida; The American Board of Radiology, Tucson, ArizonaDepartment of Radiation Oncology, University of California, Los Angeles, CaliforniaDepartment of Radiation Oncology, University of California, Los Angeles, CaliforniaPurpose: The purpose of our study was to better understand and identify concerns that may be responsible for the declining radiation oncology (RO) residency applicant pool. Methods and Materials: All RO residency programs affiliated with a US medical school were asked to participate in the study survey. An optional and anonymous survey consisting of 12 questions was emailed to all graduating medical students in 2020 at the 12 allopathic medical schools that agreed to survey administration. Survey responses were collected from March to May 2020. Results: The study consisted of 265 survey responses out of 1766 distributed to eligible medical students, resulting in a response rate of 15.0%. The majority of students reported no exposure to RO (60.8%) and never considered it as a career option (63.8%). Neutral perceptions of the field were more common (54.3%) than positive (39.6%) and negative (6.0%). The top factors attracting medical students to RO were perceptions of high salary, favorable lifestyle and workload, and technological focus. The top negative factors were the field’s interplay with physics, competitive United States Medical Licensing Examination board scores for matched applicants, and the focus placed on research during medical school. In the subgroup of students who were interested in RO but ultimately applied to another specialty, the job market was the most salient concern. Conclusions: Finding a place for RO in medical school curricula remains a challenge, with most surveyed students reporting no exposure during their education. Concern over the job market was the primary deterrent for medical students interested in pursuing RO. For disinterested students who had not considered RO as a career option, the required physics knowledge was the main deterrent.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2452109420302992
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Trudy C. Wu, MD
Susan A. McCloskey, MD
Paul E. Wallner, DO
Michael L. Steinberg, MD
Ann C. Raldow, MD, MPH
spellingShingle Trudy C. Wu, MD
Susan A. McCloskey, MD
Paul E. Wallner, DO
Michael L. Steinberg, MD
Ann C. Raldow, MD, MPH
The Declining Residency Applicant Pool: A Multi-Institutional Medical Student Survey to Identify Precipitating Factors
Advances in Radiation Oncology
author_facet Trudy C. Wu, MD
Susan A. McCloskey, MD
Paul E. Wallner, DO
Michael L. Steinberg, MD
Ann C. Raldow, MD, MPH
author_sort Trudy C. Wu, MD
title The Declining Residency Applicant Pool: A Multi-Institutional Medical Student Survey to Identify Precipitating Factors
title_short The Declining Residency Applicant Pool: A Multi-Institutional Medical Student Survey to Identify Precipitating Factors
title_full The Declining Residency Applicant Pool: A Multi-Institutional Medical Student Survey to Identify Precipitating Factors
title_fullStr The Declining Residency Applicant Pool: A Multi-Institutional Medical Student Survey to Identify Precipitating Factors
title_full_unstemmed The Declining Residency Applicant Pool: A Multi-Institutional Medical Student Survey to Identify Precipitating Factors
title_sort declining residency applicant pool: a multi-institutional medical student survey to identify precipitating factors
publisher Elsevier
series Advances in Radiation Oncology
issn 2452-1094
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Purpose: The purpose of our study was to better understand and identify concerns that may be responsible for the declining radiation oncology (RO) residency applicant pool. Methods and Materials: All RO residency programs affiliated with a US medical school were asked to participate in the study survey. An optional and anonymous survey consisting of 12 questions was emailed to all graduating medical students in 2020 at the 12 allopathic medical schools that agreed to survey administration. Survey responses were collected from March to May 2020. Results: The study consisted of 265 survey responses out of 1766 distributed to eligible medical students, resulting in a response rate of 15.0%. The majority of students reported no exposure to RO (60.8%) and never considered it as a career option (63.8%). Neutral perceptions of the field were more common (54.3%) than positive (39.6%) and negative (6.0%). The top factors attracting medical students to RO were perceptions of high salary, favorable lifestyle and workload, and technological focus. The top negative factors were the field’s interplay with physics, competitive United States Medical Licensing Examination board scores for matched applicants, and the focus placed on research during medical school. In the subgroup of students who were interested in RO but ultimately applied to another specialty, the job market was the most salient concern. Conclusions: Finding a place for RO in medical school curricula remains a challenge, with most surveyed students reporting no exposure during their education. Concern over the job market was the primary deterrent for medical students interested in pursuing RO. For disinterested students who had not considered RO as a career option, the required physics knowledge was the main deterrent.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2452109420302992
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