key: cord-0968906-jl8aouq9 authors: Rozenshtein, Anna; Griffith, Brent D.; Ruchman, Richard B. title: Residency Match during the COVID-19 pandemic: the clear and present danger of the remote interview date: 2020-10-12 journal: J Am Coll Radiol DOI: 10.1016/j.jacr.2020.10.005 sha: a99c7228419a353435c39658f74fa74fa01e9266 doc_id: 968906 cord_uid: jl8aouq9 nan In the coming Fall, graduate medical education will be adapting to the disruptions in resident recruitment caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Out of concern for the safety of medical students, the upcoming recruitment season will be conducted remotely. The benefits of remote interviews are obvious -an elimination of the risk of contagion during travel and face-to-face interviews. Additionally, remote interviews are inexpensive and convenient --and therein lies the problem. Remote interviews will almost certainly exacerbate the problem of over-application which has plagued the Match since the introduction of ERAS. Before the advent of ERAS, the cumbersome process of applying to residency programs limited the number of applications medical students were willing to send. However, with ERAS medical students had the ability to apply to all programs of their choice with a click of the mouse. Because modest increases in numbers of applications tended to increase the applicants' chances of matching, it made sense to apply widely. As a result, since 2001 the average number of applications per applicant through ERAS has increased every year in every participating specialty [1] . In radiology, the number of applications per US medical school senior has more than doubled and the number of applications per training program more than tripled ( Figure 2 ). Faced with a deluge of applications, residency programs increasingly relied on the United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Step 1 score filter, leading to its own set of problems. To remedy the situation, the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) initiated the "Apply Smart" web page which allowed medical students to determine the point of diminishing returns for each subsequent application depending on their USLME score. Still, the number of applications per person continued to rise. Weissbard et al. explained the phenomenon by the Prisoner's Dilemma (Table 1) , predicting that as long as J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f their peers are not limited in number of applications, medical students will try to stay ahead of the competition by applying to more and more programs [2] . It is likely that remote interviews will further exacerbate the problem by taking the cost of time and travel off the table. Fogel and colleagues reported that 41% of medical students declined some residency interviews for financial reasons [3] . We predict that transition to remote interviews will result in increased numbers of interview requests (ERAS applications) and higher interview acceptance rate. In the nearly costless scenario medical students lose nothing from every additional encounter while improving their interviewing skills. Because the most desirable students are usually invited first, we foresee that the competitive cohort is likely to displace other qualified applicants who would have been granted an interview in prior years. If this comes to pass, programs will interview the same applicants, resulting in a smaller rank pool and increase in the number of unfilled positions and unmatched applicants. Radiology would be particularly affected, because of its frequent use by applicants as a "backup" specialty ( Figure 2 ). The higher the percentage of such applicants in a given specialty, the more it must compete with other specialties for qualified candidates. If the cost constraints of inperson interviews are removed, top tier applicants using a specialty for "backup" may further displace qualified candidates for whom that specialty is the first or only choice. J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f Immediate solutions: The calls by programs for hard application caps [2] are unacceptable to medical students, while the calls by medical student groups for program-specific data on characteristics of matched applicants are unacceptable to programs. Attempts at making the application process less generic, such as the 2015 requirement of a program-specific paragraph introduced in the otolaryngology match may have contributed to a decline in applications and increase in unmatched programs [5] . Regardless, none of these steps correct the fundamental problem because they do not allow applicants to determine their competitiveness and signal their preferences to training programs. All program directors receive numerous expressions of interest from applicants, but such declarations are of little value since programs cannot judge the sincerity of such an expression. We recently surveyed radiology program directors as to whether they would consider an "early action" period, whereby for a short time (e.g., two weeks) at the beginning of the interview season ERAS could allow medical students to apply to a small number (e.g., ten) of programs of their choice, thus allowing a clear indication of special interest in a program. Over three quarters of respondents were willing to participate in such a program. Unfortunately, the authors' repeated attempts at persuading ERAS to pilot the solutions did not gain traction. It is possible that the AAMC, the parent of ERAS, did not see this to be a problem for medical students. However, medical students clearly saw it as a problem, and recently, appear and NRMP that "business as usual" cannot continue and urgent reform must take place. In Conclusion, while the NRMP algorithm continues to fulfill its promise of a strategy-free residency match, the current application/interview process is increasingly flawed. We worry that the COVID-19 pandemic, with its transition to remote interviews, will exacerbate the problem. In the coming match season residency administrators should keep in mind that a rise in the number of applications and a higher interview acceptance rate from highly qualified applicants do not mean greater interest in either their program or radiology as a specialty. Rather, many desirable candidates may use the additional screen time to hone their interview skills. Some Training programs grant more interviews to truly interested and qualified students with less emphasis on ERAS filters such as USMLE scores and in-state location resulting in a more diverse resident body. Students are less constrained by in-state location. Both groups of students benefit. Group 2 students who applied only to their top choice programs are more likely to fail in the Match. Group 1 students benefit by overapplication. Group 2: Students apply to as many programs as possible Group 1students who applied only to their top choice programs are more likely to fail in the Match. Group 2 students benefit by over-application. Training programs are overwhelmed with applications and filter them by the USMLE score and in-state location. Qualified students with lower USLME scores cannot get an interview, resulting in a less diverse resident body. Students are more constrained by in-state location. Both groups of students are harmed by over-application. J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f Relationship Between the Number of Residency Applications and the Yearly Match Rate: Time to Start Thinking About an Application Limit? The urology match as a prisoner's dilemma: a game theory perspective The economic burden of residency interviews on applicants Is the program-specific paragraph responsible for declining application numbers? A commentary NRMP Results and Data 2020 Main Residency Match Table 13A