Should I write about mental health on my med school app? Examining medical school admissions committee members’ biases regarding mental health conditions

Author:

Abraham Anna E.1,Busch Carly A.1,Brownell Sara E.1,Cooper Katelyn M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research for Inclusive STEM Education Center, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona

Abstract

Mental health conditions can impact college students’ academic achievements and experiences. As such, students may choose to disclose mental illnesses on medical school applications. Yet, no recent studies have investigated to what extent disclosure of a mental health condition may impact whether an applicant is accepted to medical school. We conducted an audit study to address this gap and surveyed 99 potential medical school admissions committee members from over 40 M.D.-granting schools in the United States. Participants rated a fictitious portion of a single medical school application on acceptability, competence, and likeability. They were randomly assigned to a condition: an application that explained a low semester grade-point average due to 1) a mental health condition, 2) a physical health condition, or 3) offered no explanation. After rating their respective application, all committee members were asked about when revealing a mental health condition would be beneficial and when it would be detrimental. Using ANOVAs, multinomial regression, and open coding, we found that medical school admissions committee members do not rate applications lower when a mental health condition is revealed. Committee members highlighted that revealing a mental health condition to demonstrate resiliency could be beneficial, but if the reference is vague or the condition is not being managed, it could be detrimental to a student’s application. This work indicates that medical school admissions committee members do not exhibit a bias against mental health conditions and provides recommendations on how to discuss mental illness on medical school applications.

Funder

Arizona State University

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

General Medicine,Physiology,Education

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