TY - JOUR
T1 - Applying to residency
T2 - survey of neurosurgical residency applicants on virtual recruitment during COVID-19
AU - the Society of Neurological Surgeons and American Association of Neurological Surgeons Young Neurosurgeons Committee
AU - Snyder, M. Harrison
AU - Reddy, Vamsi P.
AU - Iyer, Ankitha M.
AU - Ganju, Aruna
AU - Selden, Nathan R.
AU - Johnson, Jeremiah N.
AU - Wolfe, Stacey Q.
AU - Bendok, Bernard R.
AU - Bulsara, Ketan
AU - Chambless, Lola
AU - Dias, Mark S.
AU - Grant, Gerald A.
AU - Hadjipanayis, Costas
AU - Heth, Jason
AU - Hoh, Brian L.
AU - Huang, Judy
AU - Lawton, Michael T.
AU - Michael, Madison
AU - Miller, Jonathan P.
AU - Nakaji, Peter
AU - Schirmer, Clemens
AU - Spiotta, Alejandro
AU - Ullman, Jamie
AU - Van Gompel, Jamie
AU - Yassari, Reza
AU - Zipfel, Gregory J.
AU - Panullo, Susan
AU - Guzman, Kathy
AU - Lane, Pam
AU - Bowden, Stephen
AU - Sivakumar, Walavan
AU - Dornbos, David
AU - Mukherjee, Debraj
AU - Graffeo, Chris
AU - Agarwal, Nitin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© AANS 2022, except where prohibited by US copyright law
PY - 2022/7
Y1 - 2022/7
N2 - OBJECTIVE The COVID-19 pandemic caused a significant disruption to residency recruitment, including a sudden, comprehensive transition to virtual interviews. The authors sought to characterize applicant experiences and perceptions concerning the change in the application, interview, and match process for neurological surgery residency during the 2020-2021 recruitment cycle. METHODS A national survey of neurosurgical residency applicants from the 2020-2021 application cycle was performed. This survey was developed in cooperation with the Society of Neurological Surgeons (SNS) and the American Association of Neurological Surgeons Young Neurosurgeons Committee (YNC) and sent to all applicants (n = 280) who included academic video submissions to the SNS repository as part of their application package. These 280 applicants accounted for 69.6% of the total 402 neurosurgical applicants this year. RESULTS Nearly half of the applicants responded to the survey (44.3%, 124 of 280). Applicants favored additional reform of the interview scheduling process, including a centralized scheduling method, a set of standardized release dates for interview invitations, and interview caps for applicants. Less than 8% of students desired a virtual-only platform in the future, though the majority of applicants supported incorporating virtual interviews as part of the process to contain applicant costs and combining them with traditional in-person interview opportunities. Program culture and fit, as well as clinical and research opportunities in subspecialty areas, were the most important factors applicants used to rank programs. However, subjective program “fit” was deemed challenging to assess during virtual-only interviews. CONCLUSIONS Neurosurgery resident applicants identified standardized interview invitation release dates, centralized interview scheduling methods, caps on the number of interviews available to each candidate, and regulated opportunities for both virtual and in-person recruitment as measures that could significantly improve the applicant experience during and effectiveness of future neurosurgery residency application cycles. Applicants prioritized program culture and “fit” during recruitment, and a majority were open to incorporating virtual elements into future cycles to reduce costs while retaining in-person opportunities to gauge programs and their locations.
AB - OBJECTIVE The COVID-19 pandemic caused a significant disruption to residency recruitment, including a sudden, comprehensive transition to virtual interviews. The authors sought to characterize applicant experiences and perceptions concerning the change in the application, interview, and match process for neurological surgery residency during the 2020-2021 recruitment cycle. METHODS A national survey of neurosurgical residency applicants from the 2020-2021 application cycle was performed. This survey was developed in cooperation with the Society of Neurological Surgeons (SNS) and the American Association of Neurological Surgeons Young Neurosurgeons Committee (YNC) and sent to all applicants (n = 280) who included academic video submissions to the SNS repository as part of their application package. These 280 applicants accounted for 69.6% of the total 402 neurosurgical applicants this year. RESULTS Nearly half of the applicants responded to the survey (44.3%, 124 of 280). Applicants favored additional reform of the interview scheduling process, including a centralized scheduling method, a set of standardized release dates for interview invitations, and interview caps for applicants. Less than 8% of students desired a virtual-only platform in the future, though the majority of applicants supported incorporating virtual interviews as part of the process to contain applicant costs and combining them with traditional in-person interview opportunities. Program culture and fit, as well as clinical and research opportunities in subspecialty areas, were the most important factors applicants used to rank programs. However, subjective program “fit” was deemed challenging to assess during virtual-only interviews. CONCLUSIONS Neurosurgery resident applicants identified standardized interview invitation release dates, centralized interview scheduling methods, caps on the number of interviews available to each candidate, and regulated opportunities for both virtual and in-person recruitment as measures that could significantly improve the applicant experience during and effectiveness of future neurosurgery residency application cycles. Applicants prioritized program culture and “fit” during recruitment, and a majority were open to incorporating virtual elements into future cycles to reduce costs while retaining in-person opportunities to gauge programs and their locations.
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U2 - 10.3171/2021.8.JNS211600
DO - 10.3171/2021.8.JNS211600
M3 - Article
C2 - 34826806
AN - SCOPUS:85133396545
SN - 0022-3085
VL - 137
SP - 273
EP - 282
JO - Journal of neurosurgery
JF - Journal of neurosurgery
IS - 1
ER -