Case Reports in Education: A Virtual Orthopaedic Surgery Summit Enhances Medical Student Confidence in Preparedness for Orthopaedic Surgery Subinternships

JB JS Open Access. 2024 Dec 9;9(4):e24.00154. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.OA.24.00154. eCollection 2024 Oct-Dec.

Abstract

Introduction: Medical school curricula offer limited exposure to orthopaedic surgery, and few national initiatives aim to prepare students for orthopaedic surgery subinternships, which are critical for success in matching into orthopaedic residency. In this study, we evaluated the effectiveness of a single-day virtual "Subinternship Summit" for medical students in 2 key areas: 1) enhancing participants' confidence in their preparedness for orthopaedic subinternship rotations and 2) mitigating any disparities based on student characteristics, such as race/ethnicity, gender, or whether or not the student's school is affiliated with a "home" orthopaedic program.

Methods: In March 2024, a single-day national virtual summit was held, featuring panels on topics relevant to performance during orthopaedic subinternships. The panelists included senior medical students, orthopaedic residents, and attending orthopaedic surgeons from across the United States. Surveys were administered to participants through Qualtrics before and after the summit to collect demographic data and to assess confidence in 6 domains of subinternship performance using 5-point Likert-scale items: overall preparedness, on-call responsibilities, "soft skills," role in the operating room, role in the outpatient clinic, and understanding of resources. Our analysis included descriptive statistics, paired t tests, and multivariable linear regression. Significance was set at p < 0.05.

Results: Of 787 medical students who registered for summit, 426 attended, of whom 180 (42%) completed both the presummit and postsummit surveys. Before the summit, students reported low confidence in all domains, with 5 of 6 domains averaging less than moderate (3/5 points). Multivariable analysis revealed no differences in presummit confidence across various demographic characteristics. After the summit, all 6 domains showed significant increases in confidence, with the lowest average being 4/5 (all, p < 0.001).

Conclusions: This virtual summit effectively increased medical students' confidence in their preparedness and knowledge about orthopaedic surgery subinternships. Given the weight of subinternship performance in the match process, such an initiative may have the potential to increase medical students' success in residency applications.

Level of evidence: Level V. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

Publication types

  • Review