Rising Global Opportunities Among Orthopaedic Surgery Residency Programs

LATEST ARTICLES
SEARCH INDEX
SUGGEST ARTICLE
THE OSI COLLECTIONS
AUDIOGRAM SERIES
ABOUT THE OSI
2020 SUMMARY
2021 SUMMARY

OSI STATISTICS

Open access articles:
1592
Annotations added:
3
Countries represented:
117
No. of contributors:
14
Bookmarks made:
26

Rising Global Opportunities Among Orthopaedic Surgery Residency Programs


JournalJournal of American Academy of Orthopaedic surgeons
Article typeJournal research article – Other
Publication date – Dec – 2020
Authors – Pfeifer, Jacob; Svec, Noah; Are, Chandrakanth; Nelson, Kari L.
Keywordsopportunities, Orthopaedic surgery, Residency
Open access – Yes
SpecialityTrauma and orthopaedic surgery, Trauma surgery
World region Northern America
Country: United States of America
Language – English
Submitted to the One Surgery Index on January 2, 2021 at 8:57 am
Abstract:

Objective:
We surveyed Orthopaedic Surgery Residency (OSR) programs to determine international opportunities by the academic institutional region within the United States, location of the international experience, duration, residency program year (PGY), funding source, and resident participation to date.

Design:
We emailed a survey to all OSR programs in the United States to inquire about global opportunities in their residency programs. Further contact was made through an additional e-mail and up to three telephone calls. Data were analyzed using descriptive and chi-square statistics. This study was institutional review board exempt.

Setting:
This research study was conducted at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, a tertiary care facility in conjunction with the University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Medicine.

Participants:
The participants of this research study included program directors and coordinators of all OSR programs (185) across the United States.

Results:
A total of 102 OSR programs completed the survey (55% response rate). Notably, 50% of the responding programs offered a global health opportunity to their residents. Of the institutions that responded, those in the Midwest or South were more likely to offer the opportunity than institutions found in other US regions, although regional differences were not significant. Global experiences were most commonly: in Central or South America (41%); 1 to 2 weeks in duration (54%); and during PGY4 or PGY5 (71%). Furthermore, half of the programs provided full funding for the residents to participate in the global experience. In 33% of the programs, 10 or more residents had participated to date.

Conclusions:
Interest in global health among medical students is increasing. OSR programs have followed this trend, increasing their global health opportunities by 92% since 2015. Communicating the availability of and support for international opportunities to future residents may help interested students make informed decisions when applying to residency programs.

OSI Number – 20836

Public annotations on this article:
No public annotations yet