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Career Development Training for Interventional Pulmonary Fellows: Are They Ready for the Workforce?

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Date 2019 Nov 15
PMID 31725497
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Abstract

Background: Interventional pulmonary (IP) fellows spend ≥6 years of postgraduate medical education before IP training. Given the high employment attrition rates of early medical professionals, we investigated the IP fellows' self-assessed readiness for employment and the role of an intense preemployment educational intervention on improving the same.

Materials And Methods: Over 2 consecutive academic years, IP fellows nationally were invited to a mid-year career development symposium focusing on employment search strategy and early career development. Attendees were anonymously surveyed presymposium/postsymposium and 6 months later at graduation. Both quantitative and qualitative data were collected. Attendees' knowledge and skills were rated on a 5-point Likert scale. A control group of IP fellows that did not attend the symposium were also surveyed at graduation.

Results: In total, 53 of 55 attendees (96% response rate) completed the presymposium survey and 50 of 55 (91%) completed the final survey at graduation. Overall, 16 of 18 (89%) nonattendees also completed the final survey at graduation. IP Fellows reported low baseline self-assessment scores on all question domains. Scores increased significantly postsymposium and were sustained at graduation (P<0.05). At graduation, the average response score of symposium attendees was significantly higher than that of nonattendees (P=0.04). Overall, 84% reported that the symposium helped them with their employment search.

Conclusion: Advanced IP fellows were not well-equipped for a strategic employment search and early career development at the onset of their IP fellowship training. Participation in an intense educational intervention significantly improved fellows' self-assessment scores, an effect that was sustained at 6 months.

Citing Articles

Ready or Not, Here We Come: A Qualitative Study of the Transition From Graduate Medical Education to Independent Practice.

Diemer G, Kuchera T, Zavodnick J, Frasso R, Jaffe R J Grad Med Educ. 2025; 17(1):71-80.

PMID: 39980956 PMC: 11838052. DOI: 10.4300/JGME-D-24-00338.1.