Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8834728 | Journal of Surgical Education | 2018 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
The bias is that due to a more competitive applicant pool recruiting NDPs from surgical subspecialties would be optimal. However, those unmatched surgical subspecialty candidates are no better academically than the unmatched general surgery group, often have career interests that do not always align with scheduled rotations, and may not feel compelled to complete the year if they match. They place minimally better when accounting for those unmatched general surgery NDP R1s continuing as NDP R2s. Ultimately the success in a non-designated preliminary R1 surgery program is alignment of clinical educational opportunities with the needs of the trainee.
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Authors
Maria MD, Claire MBA, Michael MHA, Barbara BS, Mark MD,