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2000. Identifying Limitations and Opportunities for Undergraduate and Medical Student Involvement in Infectious Diseases Nationwide

BACKGROUND: Only 74% of infectious disease (ID) training positions were filled in the 2022 fellowship match. Novel and creative approaches to increasing interest and recruitment in the field must be explored. Here, we identify the lack of ID representation in medically-related student interest group...

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Autores principales: Goel, Divyam, Tin, Michelle, Hariprasad, Krishna C, Garg, Diya S, Besic, Arnel, Dillon, Tilly A, Masson, Zoe R, Goralsky, Lauren, Goralsky, Julia A, Barron, Molly K, Saji, Jasmine A, Hobson-Rohrer, Wendy L, Wallace. Jones, Trahern
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10678627/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.127
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author Goel, Divyam
Tin, Michelle
Hariprasad, Krishna C
Garg, Diya S
Besic, Arnel
Dillon, Tilly A
Masson, Zoe R
Goralsky, Lauren
Goralsky, Julia A
Barron, Molly K
Saji, Jasmine A
Hobson-Rohrer, Wendy L
Wallace. Jones, Trahern
author_facet Goel, Divyam
Tin, Michelle
Hariprasad, Krishna C
Garg, Diya S
Besic, Arnel
Dillon, Tilly A
Masson, Zoe R
Goralsky, Lauren
Goralsky, Julia A
Barron, Molly K
Saji, Jasmine A
Hobson-Rohrer, Wendy L
Wallace. Jones, Trahern
author_sort Goel, Divyam
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Only 74% of infectious disease (ID) training positions were filled in the 2022 fellowship match. Novel and creative approaches to increasing interest and recruitment in the field must be explored. Here, we identify the lack of ID representation in medically-related student interest groups and clubs at the undergraduate and medical school levels nationwide and suggest such groups be considered for recruitment strategies. METHODS: The websites of 2,321 Universities and 173 medical schools across the United States were manually searched for the presence of undergraduate clubs and interest groups, respectively, for multiple medical specialties and subspecialties, including ID. Fields considered included ID, microbiology, emergency medicine, global/public health, neuroscience/psychology, pre-health, and STEM at the undergraduate level, and ID, wilderness medicine, global health, hematology/oncology, radiology, dermatology, family medicine, internal medicine, orthopedics/sports medicine, neurology/psychiatry, and emergency medicine at the medical school level. Furthermore, zip code data from mailing addresses was used to compare the proximity of 165 adult ID Fellowships to undergraduate institutions. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria for Undergraduate Institutions [Figure: see text] Criteria were designed to exclude institutions unlikely to serve students with an eventual goal of pursuing medicine. RESULTS: Of 2,049 undergraduate institutions meeting inclusion criteria nationwide, 6 (0.29%) had a club for ID. Of 163 medical schools meeting inclusion criteria, 57 (35.0%) had an interest group for ID. ID student groups were the least prevalent among all the categories considered at both the undergraduate and medical school level. Our geographic proximity analysis found that every adult ID fellowship is in the same city and/or county as at least one undergraduate institution, and 28.5% of adult ID fellowships are in the same zip code as at least one undergraduate institution [Figure: see text] The websites of 2,321 undergraduate institutions with a minimum of 1,000 undergraduate enrollments were manually searched for the presence of medically-related clubs in various fields, including ID. Club counts are shown for 2,049 institutions meeting inclusion criteria. [Figure: see text] The websites of 173 medical schools were manually searched for the presence of medically-related interest groups in various fields, including ID. Group counts are shown for the 163 institutions with full accreditation status. CONCLUSION: ID clubs and interest groups are the least prevalent among medically-related student interest groups. This paucity presents an opportunity for the ID community to begin outreach and recruitment at the undergraduate and medical student levels, specifically through student groups. Our own group, InfectED, can be used as a model for future groups nationwide. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures
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spelling pubmed-106786272023-11-27 2000. Identifying Limitations and Opportunities for Undergraduate and Medical Student Involvement in Infectious Diseases Nationwide Goel, Divyam Tin, Michelle Hariprasad, Krishna C Garg, Diya S Besic, Arnel Dillon, Tilly A Masson, Zoe R Goralsky, Lauren Goralsky, Julia A Barron, Molly K Saji, Jasmine A Hobson-Rohrer, Wendy L Wallace. Jones, Trahern Open Forum Infect Dis Abstract BACKGROUND: Only 74% of infectious disease (ID) training positions were filled in the 2022 fellowship match. Novel and creative approaches to increasing interest and recruitment in the field must be explored. Here, we identify the lack of ID representation in medically-related student interest groups and clubs at the undergraduate and medical school levels nationwide and suggest such groups be considered for recruitment strategies. METHODS: The websites of 2,321 Universities and 173 medical schools across the United States were manually searched for the presence of undergraduate clubs and interest groups, respectively, for multiple medical specialties and subspecialties, including ID. Fields considered included ID, microbiology, emergency medicine, global/public health, neuroscience/psychology, pre-health, and STEM at the undergraduate level, and ID, wilderness medicine, global health, hematology/oncology, radiology, dermatology, family medicine, internal medicine, orthopedics/sports medicine, neurology/psychiatry, and emergency medicine at the medical school level. Furthermore, zip code data from mailing addresses was used to compare the proximity of 165 adult ID Fellowships to undergraduate institutions. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria for Undergraduate Institutions [Figure: see text] Criteria were designed to exclude institutions unlikely to serve students with an eventual goal of pursuing medicine. RESULTS: Of 2,049 undergraduate institutions meeting inclusion criteria nationwide, 6 (0.29%) had a club for ID. Of 163 medical schools meeting inclusion criteria, 57 (35.0%) had an interest group for ID. ID student groups were the least prevalent among all the categories considered at both the undergraduate and medical school level. Our geographic proximity analysis found that every adult ID fellowship is in the same city and/or county as at least one undergraduate institution, and 28.5% of adult ID fellowships are in the same zip code as at least one undergraduate institution [Figure: see text] The websites of 2,321 undergraduate institutions with a minimum of 1,000 undergraduate enrollments were manually searched for the presence of medically-related clubs in various fields, including ID. Club counts are shown for 2,049 institutions meeting inclusion criteria. [Figure: see text] The websites of 173 medical schools were manually searched for the presence of medically-related interest groups in various fields, including ID. Group counts are shown for the 163 institutions with full accreditation status. CONCLUSION: ID clubs and interest groups are the least prevalent among medically-related student interest groups. This paucity presents an opportunity for the ID community to begin outreach and recruitment at the undergraduate and medical student levels, specifically through student groups. Our own group, InfectED, can be used as a model for future groups nationwide. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures Oxford University Press 2023-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10678627/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.127 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Goel, Divyam
Tin, Michelle
Hariprasad, Krishna C
Garg, Diya S
Besic, Arnel
Dillon, Tilly A
Masson, Zoe R
Goralsky, Lauren
Goralsky, Julia A
Barron, Molly K
Saji, Jasmine A
Hobson-Rohrer, Wendy L
Wallace. Jones, Trahern
2000. Identifying Limitations and Opportunities for Undergraduate and Medical Student Involvement in Infectious Diseases Nationwide
title 2000. Identifying Limitations and Opportunities for Undergraduate and Medical Student Involvement in Infectious Diseases Nationwide
title_full 2000. Identifying Limitations and Opportunities for Undergraduate and Medical Student Involvement in Infectious Diseases Nationwide
title_fullStr 2000. Identifying Limitations and Opportunities for Undergraduate and Medical Student Involvement in Infectious Diseases Nationwide
title_full_unstemmed 2000. Identifying Limitations and Opportunities for Undergraduate and Medical Student Involvement in Infectious Diseases Nationwide
title_short 2000. Identifying Limitations and Opportunities for Undergraduate and Medical Student Involvement in Infectious Diseases Nationwide
title_sort 2000. identifying limitations and opportunities for undergraduate and medical student involvement in infectious diseases nationwide
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10678627/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.127
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