Do Lower Costs for Applicants Come at the Expense of Program Perception? A Cross-Sectional Survey Study of Virtual Residency Interviews

Author:

Wang Sheri12,Denham Zachary13,Ungerman Elizabeth A.14,Stollings Lindsay15,McCausland Julie B.16,Hamilton Melinda Fiedor17,Gonzaga Alda Maria18,Bump Gregory M.19,Metro David G.110,Adams Phillip S.111ORCID

Affiliation:

1. All authors are with UPMC

2. Sheri Wang, MD, is a PGY-2 Resident, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine

3. Zachary Denham, MD, is a PGY-4 Resident, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine

4. Elizabeth A. Ungerman, MD, MS, is Associate Residency Program Director, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine

5. Lindsay Stollings, MD, is Chair, Resident Recruitment Committee, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine

6. Julie B. McCausland, MD, MS, FACEP, is Program Director, Medical Education Transitional Year, and Co-Chair, Medical Education Professional Development Subcommittee, Department of Emergency Medicine

7. Melinda Fiedor Hamilton, MD, MS, is Co-Chair, ME Professional Development Committee, Department of Pediatrics

8. Alda Maria Gonzaga, MD, MS, is Associate Dean for Student Affairs, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine

9. Gregory M. Bump, MD, is Associate Dean of Graduate Medical Education, Designated Institutional Official, and Chair, Graduate Medical Education Committee, Department of Internal Medicine

10. David G. Metro, MD, FASA, is Senior Vice Chair for Education and Faculty Affairs, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine

11. Phillip S. Adams, DO, FASA, is Residency Program Director, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Travel costs and application fees make in-person residency interviews expensive, compounding existing financial burdens on medical students. We hypothesized virtual interviews (VI) would be associated with decreased costs for applicants compared to in-person interviews (IPI) but at the expense of gathering information with which to assess the program. Objective To survey senior medical students and postgraduate year (PGY)-1 residents regarding their financial burden and program perception during virtual versus in-person interviews. Methods The authors conducted a single center, multispecialty study comparing costs of IPI vs VI from 2020-2021. Fourth-year medical students and PGY-1 residents completed one-time surveys regarding interview costs and program perception. The authors compared responses between IPI and VI groups. Potential debt accrual was calculated for 3- and 7-year residencies. Results Two hundred fifty-two (of 884, 29%) surveys were completed comprising 75 of 169 (44%) IPI and 177 of 715 (25%) VI respondents. The VI group had significantly lower interview costs compared to the IPI group (median $1,000 [$469-$2,050 IQR] $784-$1,216 99% CI vs $3,200 [$1,700-$5,500 IQR] $2,404-$3,996 99% CI, P<.001). The VI group scored lower for feeling the interview process was an accurate representation of the residency program (3.3 [0.5] vs 4.1 [0.7], P<.001). Assuming interview costs were completely loan-funded, the IPI group will have accumulated potential total loan amounts $2,334 higher than the VI group at 2% interest and $2,620 at 6% interest. These differences were magnified for a 7-year residency. Conclusions Virtual interviews save applicants thousands of dollars at the expense of their perception of the residency program.

Publisher

Journal of Graduate Medical Education

Subject

General Medicine,Education

Reference19 articles.

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2. Masciello M, Malekzadeh S. Peri-interview communication in the otolaryngology residency match: the applicant perspective. Laryngoscope. 2021; 131(1): 28- 32. doi:10.1002/lary.28575

3. Association of Americn Medical Colleges. Youngclaus J, Fresne J. Physician Education Debt and the Cost to Attend Medical School. Accessed October 19, 2022. https://www.aamc.org/data-reports/students-residents/report/physician-education-debt-and-cost-attend-medical-school

4. Callaway P, Melhado T, Walling A, Groskurth J. Financial and time burdens for medical students interviewing for residency. Fam Med.2017; 49(2): 137- 140.

5. Agarwal N, Choi PA, Okonkwo DO, Barrow DL, Friedlander RM. Financial burden associated with the residency match in neurological surgery. J Neurosurg. 2017; 126(1): 184- 190. doi:10.3171/2015.12.JNS15488

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