Category Archives: Residency

How Faculty Can Prepare Students for the Match

By Aaron Michelfelder, MD; Joel Heidelbaugh, MD; Cristen Page, MD, MPH, and Eva Bading, MD

Read the response to this blog post, Too Much of Anything Is Bad: Advising Students on the Number of Programs to Apply to.

As matching into all specialties has become more challenging in the last few years for US medical students, it is important to provide the most timely and accurate advice to those considering family medicine.

Several confounding factors contribute to a more challenging match into family medicine as a primary specialty choice:

  • Medical school class size has increased, and new schools have been formed without any increase in residency positions.
  • There is an increase in US citizens who are international medical students and who are entering the residency Match pool.
  • Medical specialties are becoming more competitive, and students at risk of not matching into their primary specialty choice are creating parallel plans.
  • Fourth-year medical students apply to two or three different specialties, which results in more students applying to family medicine, many of whom are highly competitive and have high USMLE scores.
  • Students who in the past would have been offered many interviews are being offered fewer due to the influx of parallel plan students flooding the family medicine applicant pool.
  • Programs are placing a higher emphasis on USMLE scores as a method of predicting the possibility of passing the ABFM board exam.
  • National Residency Matching Program All In Policy means that more residency slots are filled during the Match, and fewer are available for the Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program, or SOAP (formerly called “the scramble”).

We recently hosted lecture-discussions on matching into family medicine at the 2014 Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Conference on Medical Student Education and the 2014 Association of Departments of Family Medicine Conference and have collated the thoughts and recommendations of these national discussion participants with advice to students wishing to match into family medicine as listed below.

1) Students should pass and perform well on USMLE Step 1 on the first attempt. It is better to delay clinical clerkships and graduation than to fail Step 1. Some residency programs use the average Step 1 score (around 220) as a cutoff for interview invitations.

2) Students should work hard and perform well on clinical clerkships. International medical students understand that performance on clerkships can help with getting a residency spot, so US medical students can sometimes be overshadowed by very capable and hard-working international medical students. US medical students are competing more than ever against many talented and competitive US and international medical graduates.

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“You’re a Pharmacist?” How the Emerging Leaders Fellowship Helped Me Define My Role in a FMRP

Jennie Broders, PharmD

Jennie Broders, PharmD

The question was innocent but threw me off guard. “You’re a pharmacist? I thought they locked you in the basement!”

I assured my recently admitted COPD patient that we pharmacists are often granted relief from our mysterious pharmacy lairs to spend time with our patients. She laughed, “Now I don’t feel so bad for you.”

As a clinical pharmacist, I find that I am a valued, but not always an understood, part of the team. Traditionally patients have thought of pharmacists as simply counting pills behind the counter at the local drug store—a friendly resource. Physicians may have a broader experience with pharmacists, particularly as interns relying on the pharmacist to call when they are less sure of medication choice and dosage but similarly jaded by longstanding stereotypes of centralized pharmacy models. This feeling of uncertainty on my part was only exemplified as I prepared to take on my role as a junior nonphysician faculty member in a family medicine residency program (FMRP). This time, it was me who was hesitant of my role and how to bridge my resident experience with my future career. Luckily, a fellow faculty member in my FMRP introduced me to the STFM Emerging Leaders Fellowship, a perfect support for new faculty and anyone transitioning into leadership. At the time, he was completing the fellowship and thought I may be a good fit for the program as a mechanism for better understanding the role of a faculty member and in turn setting goals for future professional development.

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Through the Residency Interview Process: Utilizing Behavioral Interviewing

Sally Weaver, PhD, MD

Sally Weaver, PhD, MD

As we are in the midst of a busy interview season (busier than past years!), I think it’s good to stop and think for a while about the type of applicants we want to eventually become our residents.

Every family medicine residency program is unique, so who we are seeking should not always be the same. For example, my program wants to attract applicants with a strong interest in breadth of training who are going to be comfortable with the amount of inpatient and OB care we provide. Your program may have an emphasis on outpatient clinical management that would not fit well with an applicant who desires more hospital exposure.

Before the interviews, faculty sits down as a group and discusses the top three to five traits or competencies that will bring in future residents who are compatible with our program’s mission and the personnel we already have in our residency program.

We often speak of finding people who will fit in here. Not only are we looking for matriculating students with a strong medical knowledge base, we also want good attitudes, great problem solvers, and learners who are self-motivated and who have high ethical standards. It would be preferential to have new residents who are attracted to the strengths of our program and not ones we will have to keep orienting to how our program works. The issue may not so much be what we think we need in our learners but how to ferret out the desired traits and attitudes during the relatively brief time we have to interview and get to know our applicants.

Many programs have added behavioral interviewing to their interview process to better find these often hard to elucidate learner traits/behaviors/attitudes. Behavioral interviewing attempts to discover how interviewees have acted (or think they would act) in employment/education-related scenarios.

During the residency interviewing process, behavioral interviewing is most often used in a small-group setting with two to four interviewees with a faculty facilitator. Clinical/ethical case scenarios are presented to the group and discussion follows. Scenarios are designed with our residency program in mind asking specific questions that link back to the traits/behaviors/attitudes that our faculty have identified as most important for the program. We let the interviewing participants know that there are no right or wrong answers. Our hope is that the prospective residents can state what needs to be done in a given situation, what action(s) they would take, and what outcomes they expect. This process can elucidate judgment, attention to detail, initiative, self-confidence, insight, integrity, and problem solving skills as well as uncover illogical thinking, overconfidence in clinical skills, control issues (from group dynamics), and problems with interpersonal communication.

Many residencies use a faculty member with training in behavioral science to facilitate these interview sessions. However, this is not a necessity, and faculty without such training can learn to run these scenario interviews quite well. Their goal as facilitator is to provide valuable information on individual interviewees to the resident selection committee.

How much more successful we will be if each program can better identify those medical students who will be the best fit in our program as residents. I do think that behavioral interviewing is an important part of selecting residents that not only fit with our program, but better still, ones that will fit and thrive!