Volume 45, Issue 8 1 pp. 2556-2566
Original Scientific Report

Investigating Factors at Play in Hepatopancreatobiliary Fellowship Selection: Beliefs versus Reality

Terence Jackson

Terence Jackson

Department of Surgery, Methodist Richardson Medical Center, 2805 E President George Bush Hwy, 75082 Richardson, TX, USA

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Joseph S. Lim

Joseph S. Lim

Department of Surgery, Methodist Richardson Medical Center, 2805 E President George Bush Hwy, 75082 Richardson, TX, USA

Department of Surgery, Medical City Healthcare, Dallas, TX, USA

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Kei Nagatomo

Kei Nagatomo

Department of Surgery, Methodist Richardson Medical Center, 2805 E President George Bush Hwy, 75082 Richardson, TX, USA

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Muhammad Darwish

Muhammad Darwish

Department of Surgery, Methodist Richardson Medical Center, 2805 E President George Bush Hwy, 75082 Richardson, TX, USA

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Edward E. Cho

Edward E. Cho

Department of Surgery, Methodist Richardson Medical Center, 2805 E President George Bush Hwy, 75082 Richardson, TX, USA

Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Texas Christian University, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, TX, USA

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Houssam Osman

Houssam Osman

Department of Surgery, Methodist Richardson Medical Center, 2805 E President George Bush Hwy, 75082 Richardson, TX, USA

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Dhiresh Rohan Jeyarajah

Corresponding Author

Dhiresh Rohan Jeyarajah

Department of Surgery, Methodist Richardson Medical Center, 2805 E President George Bush Hwy, 75082 Richardson, TX, USA

Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Texas Christian University, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, TX, USA

[email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 19 April 2021
Citations: 3

Parts of the data have been presented at the Annual Clinical Assembly 2020.

Terence Jackson and Joseph S. Lim have contributed equally to this work.

Abstract

Background

Selection biases affecting candidate matches to fellowship programs directly influence diversity within the surgical community. The review of selection bias has never been distinctively investigated in the Hepatopancreatobiliary (HPB) surgery community. This study seeks to (i) evaluate factors affecting selection of candidates to HPB fellowships, (ii) examine explicit biases among program directors and faculty of HPB programs in North America, and (iii) compare the demography of the HPB faculty and recently graduated fellows to general surgery residents.

Study Design

An anonymous, self-reported survey consisting of 10 sets of fictional applications was distributed to 52 faculty members, including program directors, of AHPBA-affiliated HPB fellowships in North America. The respondents had to pick a preferred candidate between two abridged, fictional HPB fellow applications and give an open-ended response as to why they picked that candidate. The applications were nearly identical with one notable characteristic of interest. Demographic information of both faculty and their recent fellows was also collected. This survey was administered and collected between February and April, 2020.

Results

A total of 29 fully completed responses were received, comprising a 55.7% response rate. Respondents were 72.4% male, 69.0% Caucasian, and 79.3% held US medical degrees (MD). 50.0% of respondents preferred an MD candidate to a DO candidate, and 37% preferred US graduates to foreign-trained candidates. The respondents were unanimous in stating that gender, race, and family status were not a factor in their selection process. 5.0% said they would support an LGBTQ candidate when faced with otherwise similar applicants. Seventy-six HPB fellows from the past 5 years were 76.3% male, 56.6% Caucasian, and 51.3% US graduated Doctor of Medicine (US MD).

Conclusion

This is the first study explicitly exploring the impact of demographic factors in the HPB fellowship selection process. The respondents unanimously and explicitly stated that race and gender do not play any role in their selection process. Yet, there is stark discordance between general surgery resident demographics and HPB fellow demographics. A greater effort to promote a more diverse HPB surgery community may be needed.

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