A Call to Action to Train Underrepresented Minorities in Surgical Subspecialties and Fellowships

Author:

Escobar Natalie1,Keshinro Ajaratu1,Hambrecht Amanda1,Frangos Spiros1,Berman Russell S1,DiMaggio Charles1,Joseph Kathie-Ann12,Bukur Marko1,Klein Michael J1,Ude-Welcome Akuezunkpa1,Berry Cherisse1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Surgery, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY (Escobar, Keshinro, Hambrecht, Frangos, Berman, DiMaggio, Joseph, Bukur, Klein, Ude-Welcome, Berry)

2. the New York University Langone Health Institute for Excellence in Health Equity, New York, NY (Joseph).

Abstract

BACKGROUND: With each succession along the surgical career pathway, from medical school to faculty, the percentage of those who identify as underrepresented in medicine (URiM) decreases. We sought to evaluate the demographic trend of surgical fellowship applicants, matriculants, and graduates over time. STUDY DESIGN: The Electronic Residency Application Service and the Graduate Medical Education Survey for general surgery fellowships in colorectal surgery, surgical oncology, pediatric surgery, thoracic surgery, and vascular surgery were retrospectively analyzed (2005 to 2020). The data were stratified by race and gender, descriptive statistics were performed, and time series were evaluated. Race/ethnicity groups included White, Asian, other, and URiM, which is defined as Black/African American, Hispanic/Latino(a), Alaskan or Hawaiian Native, and Native American. RESULTS: From 2005 to 2020, there were 5,357 Electronic Residency Application Service applicants, 4,559 matriculants, and 4,178 graduates to surgery fellowships. Whites, followed by Asians, represented the highest percentage of applicants (62.7% and 22.3%, respectively), matriculants (65.4% and 23.8% respectively), and graduates (65.4% and 24.0%, respectively). For URiMs, the applicants (13.4%), matriculants (9.1%), and graduates (9.1%) remained significantly low (p < 0.001). When stratified by both race and gender, only 4.6% of the applicants, 2.7% of matriculants, and 2.4% of graduates identified as both URiM and female compared to White female applicants (20.0%), matriculants (17.9%), and graduates (16.5%, p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Significant disparities exist for URiMs in general surgery subspecialty fellowships. These results serve as a call to action to re-examine and improve the existing processes to increase the number of URiMs in the surgery subspecialty fellowship training pathway.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Surgery

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