Gauging the feasibility of cost-sharing and medical student interest groups to reduce interview costs Journal Article


Authors: Lieber, B. A.; Wilson, T. A.; Bell, R. S.; Ashley, W. W., Jr; Barrow, D. L.; Wolfe, S. Q.
Article Title: Gauging the feasibility of cost-sharing and medical student interest groups to reduce interview costs
Abstract: Indirect costs of the interview tour can be prohibitive. The authors sought to assess the desire of interviewees to mitigate these costs through ideas such as sharing hotel rooms and transportation, willingness to stay with local students, and the preferred modality to coordinate this collaboration. A survey link was posted on the Uncle Harvey website and the Facebook profile page of fourth-year medical students from 6 different medical schools shortly after the 2014 match day. There were a total of 156 respondents to the survey. The majority of the respondents were postinterview medical students (65.4%), but preinterview medical students (28.2%) and current residents (6.4%) also responded to the survey. Most respondents were pursuing a field other than neurosurgery (75.0%) and expressed a desire to share a hotel room and/or transportation (77.4%) as well as stay in the dorm room of a medical student at the program in which they are interviewing (70.0%). Students going into neurosurgery were significantly more likely to be interested in sharing hotel/transportation (89.2% neurosurgery vs 72.8% nonneurosurgery; p = 0.040) and in staying in the dorm room of a local student when on interviews (85.0% neurosurgery vs 57.1% nonneurosurgery; p = 0.040) than those going into other specialties. Among postinterview students, communication was preferred to be by private, email identification-only chat room. Given neurosurgery resident candidates' interest in collaborating to reduce interview costs, consideration should be given to creating a system that could allow students to coordinate cost sharing between interviewees. Moreover, interviewees should be connected to local students from neurosurgery interest groups as a resource.
Journal Title: Neurosurgical focus
Volume: 37
Issue: 5
ISSN: 1092-0684; 1092-0684
Publisher: Unknown  
Journal Place: United States
Date Published: 2014
Start Page: E11
Language: eng
DOI/URL:
Notes: JID: 100896471; OTO: NOTNLM; ppublish