Problem Traditional metrics used in residency application review processes are systematically biased against applicants from minoritized communities that are underrepresented in medicine (URiM). These biases harm not just URiM applicants but also residency programs and patients. Although several residency programs have implemented holistic reviews to mitigate these biases, few tested tools exist that can be adapted and implemented in a wide variety of settings within academic medicine. Approach This article describes advances made in the third year of a longitudinal, ongoing quality improvement project that used the A3 framework to improve recruitment of URiM residents to a family medicine residency program. The authors devised a systematic holistic application review process (SHARP) to determine which applicants to invite to interview with the program. SHARP's development began in August 2019, and after significant discussion with program leadership and iterations of rubric refinement, the program adopted SHARP in September 2020 to review applications for the 2021 application cycle. Outcomes Compared with the 2016 to 2020 period before SHARP implementation, data from the 2021 and 2022 residency application cycles after SHARP implementation showed a significant increase in the proportion of interviewed candidates who identify as URiM (from 23% to 38%, P
CITATION STYLE
Igarabuza, L., Gusoff, G. M., Maharaj-Best, A. C., Baylson, M. J., Betancourt, R. M., Nicklin, D. E., & Wang, J. Y. (2024). SHARPening Residency Selection: Implementing a Systematic Holistic Application Review Process. Academic Medicine, 99(1), 58–62. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000005451
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