Reported Visa Acceptance or Sponsorship for Non-US Citizen Applicants to US Internal Medicine Residency Programs

Author:

Tiako Max Jordan Nguemeni1ORCID,Fatola Ayotola2,Nwadiuko Joseph3

Affiliation:

1. Max Jordan Nguemeni Tiako, MD, MS, is a Resident in Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Clinical Fellow in Medicine, Harvard Medical School

2. Ayotola Fatola, MD, is a Resident, Department of Internal Medicine, Johns Hopkins University Hospital

3. Joseph Nwadiuko, MD, MPH, MSHP, is a PhD Student, Department of Health Policy and Management, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, and a General Internist, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Non-US citizen international medical graduates (IMGs) make up a significant proportion of the physician workforce, especially in physician shortage areas and specialties. IMGs face barriers matriculating in US residency programs. Whether a program reports accepting J-1 visas and sponsoring H-1B visas influences their decision to apply, it remains unclear which institutional factors shape programs' likelihood to consider visa-seeking applicants. Objective We investigated factors associated with programs reporting accepting J-1 visas or sponsoring H-1B visas for non-citizen applicants in internal medicine, the specialty most sought after by IMGs. Methods We performed multivariable regression analyses using publicly available data to identify characteristics associated with reported visa acceptance (J-1 and or H-1B). Covariates included university affiliation, program size, program type (academic, university-affiliated community, or community), and Doximity reputation ranking. Results We identified 419 programs: 267 (63.7%) reported accepting J-1 visas. Among programs that accepted J-1 visas, 65.6% (n=175) accepted only J-1 visas while 34.5% (n=92) sponsored H-1B and accepted J-1 visas. Ranking in the third quartile (vs first quartile) was associated with lower odds of accepting J-1 (aOR 0.12; 95% CI 0.02-0.87; P=.04) and sponsoring H-1B visas (aOR 0.19; 95% CI 0.05-0.76; P=.02). Community status (vs academic) was associated with lower odds of accepting J-1 visas (aOR 0.2; 95% CI 0.06-0.64; P=.007), as was county hospital affiliation vs non-county hospitals (aOR 0.22; 95% CI 0.11-0.42; P<.001). Conclusions While prior evidence shows that most internal medicine programs that substantially enroll IMGs are low ranking, high-ranking internal medicine programs are paradoxically more likely to report that they consider and sponsor visa-seeking applicants.

Publisher

Journal of Graduate Medical Education

Subject

General Medicine,Education

Reference36 articles.

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