Abstract

Changes in residency recruitment have significantly altered how programs and applicants evaluate each other including virtual interviews, discontinuation of the United States Medical Licensing Exam Step 2 Clinical Skills exam, and transition of United States Medical Licensing Exam Step 1 to pass-fail scoring. To improve program-applicant fit, the Electronic Residency Application Service introduced supplemental application features including geographic preference, program signaling, and the opportunity to highlight impactful and meaningful experiences. We sought to evaluate child neurology (CN) and neurodevelopmental disabilities (NDD) program director's (PD) opinions regarding these changes. A 10-question anonymous survey was sent to CN (n=75) and NDD (n=8) PDs. The questions centered on PDs' opinions regarding components of the supplemental application, having a standard application review period and in-person recruitment activities. Answer choices to the questions were all close-ended. Respondents could select questions to complete. Thirty-eight CN residency PDs (49%) and 4 NDD residency PDs (50%) responded to the survey. Among CN PDs, there was strong support for use of the supplemental application questions and for the use of 3 program signals per applicant. Most PDs supported a standardized application review period prior to programs sending interview offers; however, there was no consensus on the appropriate length of time. Nearly half agreed with virtual-only interviews, and 62% agreed with the option of in-person second-look visits. CN PDs generally support many of the recent or proposed changes to residency recruitment. The impact of these changes on recruitment will be a topic of future investigation.

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