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Objective To survey graduating US neurology residents on the topics of debt, fellowship interview process, future plans, and their readiness for practice and business management tasks. Methods An electronic survey was sent to all US American Academy of Neurology member adult and child neurology residents graduating in June 2017. Results The response rate was 23. 4% (n = 159). Of the 143 residents who provided information about student loans, 57% reported having debt (median 180, 000). Ninety percent of respondents reported plans to pursue a fellowship after residency; 57% intended to stay at their home institution for additional training. Among respondents from adult neurology programs, 87% preferred to begin the fellowship application process after the first 6 months of the third postgraduate year. Almost half (46%) of adult neurology program residents felt they did not have enough outpatient exposure prior to making fellowship decisions compared to 14% of child neurology trainees. Although reported readiness to perform specific tasks (coding and office management) increased since 2007 (p Conclusion Trainees completing residency report considerable educational debt. A large majority of residents feel the fellowship application process occurs too early. Despite improvements over recent years, the majority of residents continue to feel ill-prepared for specific practice management tasks. These results suggest a need to better understand the effect of educational debt on career choices, an examination of the timing of the fellowship application process, and the incorporation of additional business management training during residency.
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Abhimanyu Mahajan
James Madison University
Carolyn Cahill
University of Southern California
Eugene Scharf
Mayo Clinic
Neurology
University of Southern California
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Mayo Clinic in Arizona
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Mahajan et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a22f3bede43f553a0cb1968 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.0000000000006739
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