4.5 Article

Preference Signaling for General Surgery Residency: How Should Applicants Use Signaling?

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Medicine, General & Internal

Characterization of Applicant Preference Signals, Invitations for Interviews, and Inclusion on Match Lists for Residency Positions in Urology

Ralph Grauer et al.

Summary: This study analyzed the usage and results of preference signals in the American Urological Association urology match, finding that geographic similarity and signal usage were associated with successful applications. The findings provide important insights for future behavior.

JAMA NETWORK OPEN (2023)

Article Otorhinolaryngology

Two-Year Interview and Match Outcomes of Otolaryngology Preference Signaling

C. W. David Chang et al.

Summary: This study presents the first year-over-year data comparison of preference signaling for residency interviews in the otolaryngology application marketplace. It found that signaled programs were more likely to receive interview invitations, with a greater impact on less competitive applicants.

OTOLARYNGOLOGY-HEAD AND NECK SURGERY (2023)

Article Surgery

General Surgery Residency Virtual Recruitment During the Pandemic: An Analysis of Applicant Surveys

Dennis M. Vaysburg et al.

Summary: The COVID-19 pandemic led to virtual interviews for general surgery residency match, and this study evaluates applicant opinions of the virtual recruitment format. Results show that most applicants have a favorable view of the virtual interview and prefer it as a component of the application process, while also supporting innovation such as limiting interviews and incorporating virtual events.

JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH (2023)

Article Surgery

Video Interviews and Surgical Applicants? Ability to Assess Fit to Residency Programs

Jorge G. Zarate Rodriguez et al.

Summary: This study aimed to investigate the ability of applicants to assess fit factors through video interviews. The findings showed that the most important factors for fit were how much the program cared, resident satisfaction, and resident rapport. The hardest factors to assess through video interviews were resident rapport, diversity of the patient population, and quality of the facilities. Diversity-related factors were more important to female and non-White applicants but were not more difficult to assess.

JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH (2023)

Article Education, Scientific Disciplines

The Otolaryngology Residency Program Preference Signaling Experience

Steven D. Pletcher et al.

Summary: In the 2021 residency application cycle, a large number of otolaryngology applicants applied to more than half of the programs, increasing competition among applicants and making it difficult for programs to identify sincere interest. To address this issue, a preference signaling process was implemented, allowing applicants to indicate their interest in specific programs during the application submission. This process significantly increased the rate of interview offers from signaled programs compared to nonsignaled programs, and both applicants and program directors strongly favored continuing this program.

ACADEMIC MEDICINE (2022)

Article Education, Scientific Disciplines

Applicants' perception of fit to residency programmes in the video-interview era: A large multidisciplinary survey

Jorge G. Zarate Rodriguez et al.

Summary: Video-interviewing may affect residency applicants' ability to gauge fit, as there is a marked discrepancy between the most important factors to applicants for fit and their ability to assess those factors virtually. Female and non-White applicants place greater importance on diversity-related factors, while White male applicants self-assigned higher fit scores.

MEDICAL EDUCATION (2022)

Editorial Material Emergency Medicine

Making Our Preference Known: Preference Signaling in the Emergency Medicine Residency Application

Alexis E. Pelletier-Bui et al.

WESTERN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE (2022)

Letter Education, Scientific Disciplines

The Case for Preference Signaling

Pauniz Salehi et al.

JOURNAL OF SURGICAL EDUCATION (2021)

Article Urology & Nephrology

Improving The Match: Use of Preference Signaling to Optimize the Urology Match Interview Process

Jennifer Fantasia et al.

Summary: Preference signaling (PS) is a standardized system in which students can demonstrate genuine interest in a particular program by sending a signal or token. It helps to streamline pre-interview communication and allows programs to identify applicants with sincere interest, potentially optimizing scarce resources such as time and interview slots in the match process.

UROLOGY (2021)

Article Radiology, Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging

Lessons Learned: Applicant Equity and the 2020-2021 Virtual Interview Season

Nicholas M. Heitkamp et al.

ACADEMIC RADIOLOGY (2021)

Editorial Material Medicine, General & Internal

Potential Implications of COVID-19 for the 2020-2021 Residency Application Cycle

Maya M. Hammoud et al.

JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION (2020)