Racial and Ethnic Diversity of U.S. Plastic Surgery Trainees.

Journal of surgical education 2017 Vol.74(1) p. 117-123

Silvestre J, Serletti JM, Chang B

Abstract

[BACKGROUND] Increased diversity of U.S. physicians can improve patient communication and mitigate health disparities for racial minorities. This study analyzes trends in racial and ethnic diversity of plastic surgery residents.

[METHODS] Demographic data of surgical residents, medical students, and integrated plastic surgery residency applicants were obtained from the Association of American Medical Colleges. Data for college students and the general population were obtained from the U.S. Census for comparison with plastic surgery. Interspecialty differences and temporal trends in racial composition were analyzed with chi-square tests.

[RESULTS] From 1995 to 2014, Asian and Hispanic plastic surgery residents increased nearly 3-fold (7.4%-21.7%, p < 0.001) and 2-fold (4.6%-7.9%, p < 0.001), respectively. African American plastic surgery residents did not increase significantly (3.0%-3.5%, p = 0.129). Relative to the U.S. population, Hispanics (range: 0.1-0.5-fold) and African Americans (range: 0.1-0.4-fold) were underrepresented, whereas Asians (range: 2.2-5.3-fold) were overrepresented in plastic surgery. A "bottleneck" existed in the pipeline of African American and Hispanic plastic surgery residents. Significant differences in racial composition existed between plastic surgery and other surgical disciplines, which varied over time. The percentage of Hispanic (10.6% vs 7.0%, p = 0.402) and African American (6.4% vs 2.1%, p < 0.001) plastic surgery residency applicants exceeded those in residency.

[CONCLUSIONS] Hispanics and African Americans are underrepresented in plastic surgery residency relative to whites and Asians. This study underscores the need for greater initiatives to increase diversity in plastic surgery residency.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
약물 [BACKGROUND] scispacy 1
약물 [CONCLUSIONS] scispacy 1
기타 patient scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Adult; Black or African American; Cultural Diversity; Databases, Factual; Education, Medical, Graduate; Female; Healthcare Disparities; Hispanic or Latino; Humans; Internship and Residency; Male; Needs Assessment; Racial Groups; Retrospective Studies; Specialties, Surgical; Surgery, Plastic; United States