Evaluating Changes in Family Medicine Applicant Characteristics Following the Onset of Virtual Interviewing

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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The COVID-19 pandemic obliged the field of graduate medical education to pivot from in-person to virtual residency interviews in 2020. The decreased travel and financial barriers of this format could potentially lead to greater diversity and equity in the primary care work-force. We aimed to evaluate changes in applicant pools from in-person to virtual interviewing cycles. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective review of Electronic Residency Application Services (ERAS) from five US family medicine residencies across five interview cycles (three in-person and two virtual; 2017/2018 through 2021/2022). We compared geographic and demographic data about applicants as well as administrative program data. RESULTS: The study included 25,271 applicants. The average distance between applicants and programs was 768 miles during in-person interview years and 772 miles during virtual interview years (P=.27). Applicants who inter-viewed with programs were 446 and 459 miles away, respectively (P=.06). During in-person application years, applicants with backgrounds historically un-derrepresented in medicine (URM) submitted an average of 21% of applications; this increased approximately 1% during virtual interviewing years (OR, 1.08; P=.03). There were no other differences between in-person and virtual application years in rates of URM applicants. Residency programs received more applications from US medical schools (OR, 1.46; P

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APA

Grace, A. J., Teigen, K., Buck, K., Clark, M., Seavey, A., Brennan, J., … Zeman, J. (2022). Evaluating Changes in Family Medicine Applicant Characteristics Following the Onset of Virtual Interviewing. Family Medicine, 54(10), 791–797. https://doi.org/10.22454/fammed.2022.625652

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