Demographic and applicant-specific Predictors of medical school research productivity in a national cohort of dermatology residents.

Harrison Zhu,Austin Huang,Kelvin Zhou,Anshul Bhatnagar, Ryan Sorensen,Kathryn Cordova, Gianmarco A Calderara,Nina Dasari, R Parker Kirby,Soo Jung Kim

Clinics in dermatology(2023)

引用 0|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
Research is a crucial aspect of medical advancement, and applicants applying to dermatology often have very high research outputs. With USMLE Step 1 becoming pass/fail, research productivity may be more emphasized. We primarily sought to assess predictors of medical school research productivity. Class of 2023 dermatology residents publicly listed on ACGME accredited programs were included. Their medical-school bibliography and demographics were assessed using PubMed and other platforms (e.g., Doximity, Linked-in). By multivariable analysis, students who attended a top-25 medical school (ranked by US News and World Reports) or were Ph.D. graduates had significantly higher H-indices, average impact factors, and total years of research activity (P<0.01). Top-25 medical school graduates also had significantly higher total peer-reviewed publications, authorships, and clinical research manuscripts (P<0.01). Ph.D. graduates had significantly greater clinical research and fewer dermatology-related manuscripts (P<0.03). Graduates of osteopathic medical schools had significantly fewer review papers (P=0.02). Gender and graduation from an international medical school had no relationship with research productivity. Our study demonstrates a correlation between applicant-specific factors and research productivity. Since the emphasis on research productivity may increase, understanding the mechanisms behind these relationships may guide future dermatology applicants or their mentors.
更多
查看译文
关键词
medical school research productivity,national cohort,applicant-specific
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要