Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU"— Presentation transcript:

1 CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU
# AA18 CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU Student Use and Perceived Reliability of Emergency Medicine Advising Sources David Carle, MS4, ETSU Quillen College of Medicine Ross Christensen, DO, Maricopa Medical Center Zach Jarou, MD, Denver Health Medical Center Kevin King, MD, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio Jeff Druck, MD, University of Colorado QUESTIONS? @MedicCarle

2 CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU
Student Use and Perceived Reliability of Emergency Medicine Advising Sources #CORDAA18 BACKGROUND METHODS Applying to residency can be a complicated and anxiety provoking process for many students Trusted advising resources can help students apply smarter and avoid over application A maximum of 200 third and fourth year medical students attending EMRA’s Medical Student Forum at the 2017 ACEP Scientific Assembly were invited to complete an IRB-approved survey using PollEverywhere Students were asked to rate the trustworthiness of several well-known sources of advising information and to assess the helpfulness of potential future advising resources OBJECTIVE To evaluate the use and perceived trustworthiness of several in-person and organizational advising sources for emergency medicine residency applicants

3 In-Person Sources of Advice Organizational Sources of Advice
Student Use and Perceived Reliability of Emergency Medicine Advising Sources #CORDAA18 For in-person advising, students found national EM program leaders, EM alumni from their medical school, and resident mentors to be the most trustworthy. Student peers and Deans were found to be the least trustworthy. When considering advice provided by organizations, students considered the AAMC and EMRA to be most trustworthy. Many students had not used CORD’s Blog or Student Advising Task Force However, those who did found the resources to be (very) trustworthy. Students do not consider online forums such as StudentDoctor.Net or Reddit to be trustworthy sources of information. 6) Students rated a central source for program-specific information about past interviewed applicants as most helpful for future applicants, compared to average number of applicants/interviewees at each program or consensus statements to help applicants determine their competitiveness to guide application behavior. RESULTS In-Person Sources of Advice Organizational Sources of Advice

4 Student Use and Perceived Reliability of Emergency Medicine Advising Sources
#CORDAA18 RESULTS

5 QUESTIONS? @MedicCarle
Student Use and Perceived Reliability of Emergency Medicine Advising Sources #CORDAA18 CONCLUSIONS LIMITATIONS Applicants find some advising resources more trustworthy than others Many students are not aware of resources provided by some organizations, indicating more work should be done to publicize the availability of these resources Students prefer transparent access to data, as opposed to consensus statements, to help guide their application decisions Survey respondents were polled at an in-person event primarily advertised by EMRA, which may not account for views of students more involved with No information was collected regarding the frequency or duration of time each of the in-person or organization resource was used QUESTIONS? @MedicCarle


Download ppt "CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google