Abstract

BackgroundThe residency match is an important event in an aspiring physician’s career. Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery (OTL-HNS) is a surgical specialty that has enjoyed high numbers of applicants to its residency programs. However, recent trends in Canada show a decline in first-choice applicants to several surgical fields. Factors thought to influence a medical student’s choice include role models, career opportunities and work-life balance. The notion of perceived competitiveness is a factor that has not yet been explored. This study sought to compare competitiveness of OTL-HNS, as perceived by Canadian medical students to residency match statistics published yearly by CaRMS (Canadian Residency Matching Service), with the hope of informing future decisions of surgical residency programs.MethodsAn electronic survey was created and distributed to all medical students enrolled in the 17 Canadian medical schools. After gathering demographic information, students were asked to rank what they perceived to be the five most competitive disciplines offered by CaRMS. They were also asked to rank surgical specialties from most to least competitive. Publically available data from CaRMS was then collected and analyzed to determine actual competitiveness of admissions to Canadian OTL-HNS residency programs.Results1194 students, from first to fourth year of medical school, completed the survey. CaRMS statistics over the period from 2008 to 2014 demonstrated that the five most competitive specialties were Plastic Surgery, Dermatology, Ophthalmology, Emergency Medicine and OTL-HNS. Among surgical disciplines, OTL-HNS was third most competitive, where on average 72% of students match to their first-choice discipline. When students were questioned, 35% ranked OTL-HNS amongst the top five most competitive. On the other hand 72%, 74% and 80% recognized Opthalmology, Dermatology and Plastic Surgery as being among the five most competitive, respectively. We found that fourth-year medical students were significantly more knowledgeable about the competitiveness of both OTL-HNS and Plastic Surgery compared to first-year students (p < 0.01).ConclusionOverall, Canadian medical students may underestimate the competitiveness of OTL-HNS. Furthermore, competitiveness would appear to be a concept that resonates with medical students during the match process.

Highlights

  • The residency match is an important event in an aspiring physician’s career

  • National data from the Canadian Residency Matching Service (CaRMS), for the period of 2002-2007 compared to 2008-2013, showed a 16.1% decline in first-choice applicants to Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery (OTL-HNS), similar to declines seen in neurosurgery (23.1%), urology (18.0%) and plastic surgery (15.1%) [13, 14]

  • When we examined the ten surgical disciplines, we found that OTL-HNS was third most competitive, where on average, only 72% of students match to their first-choice discipline [14]

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Summary

Introduction

The residency match is an important event in an aspiring physician’s career. Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery (OTL-HNS) is a surgical specialty that has enjoyed high numbers of applicants to its residency programs. Many factors have been shown to influence a medical student’s choice of residency program, including presence of positive role models, long-term career opportunities, perceived work-life balance, heaviness of call schedule, academic and research opportunities, and length of post-graduate training [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. To varying degrees, these considerations can either attract or deter students from applying to certain residency programs. Overall OTL-HNS remains one of the most competitive disciplines offered

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