Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3873993 The Journal of Urology 2010 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

PurposeWe examined the incidence of resume fraud among urology residency applicants by determining the rate of misrepresented publications listed in applications to a urology residency program.Materials and MethodsApplications from all 147 urology residency applicants to a program from the 2007 application cycle were analyzed. Verification of listed publications was attempted by querying PubMed®, Google™ Scholar and MEDLINE®. Univariate analysis was conducted to assess associations between unverifiable publications and applicant demographics.ResultsOf the applicants who submitted publications 19% (14 of 71) had at least 1 unverifiable publication, which represented 9% (14 of 147) of the entire applicant pool. There were no statistically significant associations between misrepresented publications and applicant demographics.ConclusionsApplicants had a low but still unacceptable rate of misrepresented publications and this trend in academic medicine is of great concern.

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