Abstract
Historically, graduating head and neck (HN) fellows outpace available academic HN positions, resulting in a highly competitive job market. We identified factors that associate with full-time academic HN positions post-HN fellowship. Graduates of American Head and Neck Society (AHNS)-accredited fellowships from 2005 to 2017 (n=356) were extracted from the AHNS website. From 2015 to 2017, the supply-demand mismatch for academic HN jobs improved. Of the 57.3% (n=204) of graduating HN fellows who entered academia, 64% (n=130) trained at just 10 fellowship institutions, 47% (n=94) attended OHNS residency at an NIH top 40 funded institution, and 54% (n=111) attended OHNS residency at an AHNS-accredited institution offering HN fellowship. After multivariate regression, number of manuscripts (OR=1.14; p=0.01) was significantly associated with initial academic job post-fellowship. The recent improvement in supply-demand mismatch for academic jobs is promising for future HN fellows interested in academia.
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