Barriers to Increasing Diversity in Orthopaedics: The Residency Program Perspective

There are little data to explain why the surgical subspecialty of orthopaedic surgery struggles with improving the racial/ethnic composition of its workforce. The current work sought to determine what orthopaedic residency program directors and coordinators believe are the barriers to improving dive...

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Veröffentlicht in:JB & JS open access 2020-04, Vol.5 (2), p.e0007-e0007
Hauptverfasser: McDonald, Tyler C, Drake, Luke C, Replogle, William H, Graves, Matthew L, Brooks, Jaysson T
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There are little data to explain why the surgical subspecialty of orthopaedic surgery struggles with improving the racial/ethnic composition of its workforce. The current work sought to determine what orthopaedic residency program directors and coordinators believe are the barriers to improving diversity at their own programs. Between November 17, 2018, and April 1, 2019, a 17-question survey was electronically distributed to the program directors and coordinators of 155 allopathic orthopaedic surgery residency programs. Seventy-five of 155 programs (48.4%) responded to the survey. A p-value of < 0.05 was used to determine statistical significance. The most commonly stated barriers to increasing diversity within the orthopaedic surgery programs were the following: "We do not have enough minority faculty, which may deter the applicants" (69.3%), "We consistently rank minority applicants high but can never seem to match them" (56%), and "Not enough minorities are applying to our program" (54.7%). Programs with higher percentages of underrepresented minority (URM) faculty had higher percentages of URM residents (p = 0.001). Programs participating in the Nth Dimensions and/or Perry Initiative programs had a higher percentage of URM faculty as compared to the residency programs that did not participate in these programs (p = 0.004). URM residents represented 17.5% of all residents who resigned and/or were dismissed in the 10 years preceding the survey while also only representing 6% of all orthopaedic residents during the same time period. From the orthopaedic residency program perspective, the greatest perceived barrier to increasing the racial/ethnic diversity of residents in their program is their lack of URM faculty. Surveyed programs with more URM faculty had more URM residents, and programs participating in Nth Dimensions and/or Perry Initiative programs had a higher percentage of URM faculty.
ISSN:2472-7245
2472-7245
DOI:10.2106/JBJS.OA.20.00007