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Browsing by Author "Pillow, M. Tyson"
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Item A Critical Disconnect: Residency Selection Factors Lack Correlation With Intern Performance(Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, 2020) Burkhardt, John C.; Parekh, Kendra P.; Gallahue, Fiona E.; London, Kory S.; Edens, Mary A.; Humbert, A.J.; Pillow, M. Tyson; Santen, Sally A.; Hopson, Laura R.; Emergency Medicine, School of MedicineBackground: Emergency medicine (EM) residency programs want to employ a selection process that will rank best possible applicants for admission into the specialty. Objective: We tested if application data are associated with resident performance using EM milestone assessments. We hypothesized that a weak correlation would exist between some selection factors and milestone outcomes. Methods: Utilizing data from 5 collaborating residency programs, a secondary analysis was performed on residents trained from 2013 to 2018. Factors in the model were gender, underrepresented in medicine status, United States Medical Licensing Examination Step 1 and 2 Clinical Knowledge (CK), Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA), grades (EM, medicine, surgery, pediatrics), advanced degree, Standardized Letter of Evaluation global assessment, rank list position, and controls for year assessed and program. The primary outcomes were milestone level achieved in the core competencies. Multivariate linear regression models were fitted for each of the 23 competencies with comparisons made between each model's results. Results: For the most part, academic performance in medical school (Step 1, 2 CK, grades, AOA) was not associated with residency clinical performance on milestones. Isolated correlations were found between specific milestones (eg, higher surgical grade increased wound care score), but most had no correlation with residency performance. Conclusions: Our study did not find consistent, meaningful correlations between the most common selection factors and milestones at any point in training. This may indicate our current selection process cannot consistently identify the medical students who are most likely to be high performers as residents.Item Overcoming barriers to promotion for women and underrepresented inmedicine faculty in academic emergency medicine(Wiley, 2021-12-21) Oh, Laura; Linden, Judith A.; Zeidan, Amy; Salhi, Bisan; Lema, Penelope C.; Pierce, Ava E.; Greene, Andrea L.; Werner, Sandra L.; Heron, Sheryl L.; Lall, Michelle D.; Finnell, John T.; Franks, Nicole; Battaglioli, Nicole J.; Haber, Jordana; Sampson, Christopher; Fisher, Jonathan; Pillow, M. Tyson; Doshi, Ankur A.; Lo, Bruce; Emergency Medicine, School of MedicineEquity in the promotion of women and underrepresented minorities (URiM) is essential for the advancement of academic emergency medicine and the specialty as a whole. Forward‐thinking healthcare organizations can best position themselves to optimally care for an increasingly diverse patient population and mentor trainees by championing increased diversity in senior faculty ranks, leadership, and governance roles. This article explores several potential solutions to addressing inequities that hinder the advancement of women and URiM faculty. It is intended to complement the recently approved American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) policy statement aimed at overcoming barriers to promotion of women and URiM faculty in academic emergency medicine. This policy statement was jointly released and supported by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM), American Academy of Emergency Medicine (AAEM), and the Association of Academic Chairs of Emergency Medicine (AACEM).