Abstract

Little is known regarding the career paths of adult multidisciplinary critical care medicine (CCM) fellowship graduates. The purpose of this study is to describe the demographic profiles and characteristics of the first jobs held by internal medicine-CCM fellowship graduates trained at a freestanding cancer center. An electronic survey was developed via Research Electronic Data Capture that addressed first employment parameters and was sent between May 1, 2019, and December 31, 2021, to 133 CCM fellows who completed CCM fellowship training from 2000 to 2020 at our institution. A total of 93 fellows (70%) responded to the postfellowship job survey; 80(60%) with complete responses were analyzed. Seventy-four percent of respondents were men, 41% were White, 81% were international medical graduates, and 31% were holders of J-1 exchange visitor (n = 8) or H-1B (n = 17) visas. The mean age at completion of CCM fellowship was 36 years. Twenty-seven respondents (34%) completed two years of fellowship training and 53 (66%) completed one year. Internal medicine was the primary residency training before CCM fellowship for 75 respondents (94%) and emergency medicine for 5 (6%). Of those who did one year of fellowship (n = 53), 45 (85%) had already completed two-year fellowships in pulmonary medicine. Thirty-two respondents (40%) completed training from 2000 to 2009 and 48 (60%) from 2010 to 2020. The first employment for the majority (>80%) of graduates was in community teaching hospitals. Of the graduates who spent ⩾50% of time clinically in CCM, 85% rounded in multiple intensive care units (ICU). Compensation sources were from hospitals for 81%, private billing for 15%, and through faculty practice plans for 4% of respondents. At the time of survey completion, 51 respondents (64%) were still at their first jobs; of these, slightly more than half (56%) had graduated from the fellowship program in the past 10 years. The majority of CCM fellowship graduates from our program practiced CCM at community teaching hospitals, rounded in multiple ICUs, and were compensated primarily by the hospital.

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