Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • APDS (4)
  • female (1)
  • humans (1)
  • internship (1)
  • questionnaires (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Resident attrition from the field of General Surgery has been extensively studied. Attrition from one General Surgery program to the benefit of another has not. General Surgery programs can be negatively affected when a resident decides to leave the program for another. When a resident in a general surgery residency program decides to attempt transfer to another program several decisions must be made. The resident applies for the open position, interviews and then may be offered a position in that program. If an offer is made and the resident accepts, at what point is the resident's current Program Director notified? At what point in the process does the resident leave his/her current program to begin the new program? At what point does the new Program Director obtain a summative evaluation of the resident? Does the resident experience retribution as a result of informing his/her fellow residents and faculty that s/he is leaving? These are all questions that Program Directors struggle with when they find themselves with an unexpected opening to fill. The APDS Task Force on Resident Transfers attempted to answer these and other questions. A 19-question survey was distributed via the APDS to all General Surgery Program Directors who utilize the list serve. The survey asked questions related to the following: acceptable reasons for transfer; timeline for the application, interview and transfer process; retaliation against residents who chose to transfer; and transparency in the transfer process. The survey was distributed via e-mail nationwide. General Surgery Residency Program Directors are participated in the survey. The majority of the 99 respondents agreed to the following guidelines: (1) Program Directors must promote transparency in the transfer process; (2) Program Directors must make a statement against retaliation; (3) personal or family preference is the most acceptable reason for transfer; (4) an established transfer date must be agreeable to both programs; and, (5) a recruitment timeline should be established for both programs. All data are included below. The reasons that a resident chooses to leave a program and the effect this has on the program and the other residents requires further study. Program Directors should educate residents about the transfer process and that procedure should be available as a written policy. When a resident desires transfer to another program, following these guidelines may make the transition easier for all involved. The APDS supports putting them into practice. Published by Elsevier Inc.

    Citation

    Elizabeth Cirincione, Randy J Woods, Lindsay E Kuo, Paul W Nelson, Kaushal Patel. APDS Task Force on Resident Transfers: Guidelines for Program Directors. Journal of surgical education. 2021 May-Jun;78(3):795-800

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags


    PMID: 32958419

    View Full Text