Inclusion and Representation in the Pediatric Surgery Workforce: Strategies to Mitigate Bias in the Fellowship Application Process

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Loren Berman, Elizabeth Renaud, Devon Pace, Cynthia D. Downard, Benedict C. Nwomeh, Eunice Y. Huang, Ying Z. Weatherall, Samir K. Gadepalli, Kevin P. Mollen, Grace Z. Mak, Erika Newman, APSTPD DEI Committee Published:

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Loren Berman, Elizabeth Renaud, Devon Pace, Cynthia D. Downard, Benedict C. Nwomeh, Eunice Y. Huang, Ying Z. Weatherall, Samir K. Gadepalli, Kevin P. Mollen, Grace Z. Mak, Erika Newman, APSTPD DEI Committee

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Abstract

Diverse perspectives are critical components of effective teams in every industry. Underrepresentation of minorities in medicine leads to worse outcomes for minority patients, and efforts to increase diversity in the health care workforce are critical. Presently, about 70% of the pediatric surgery workforce is white, and pediatric surgeons at large do not reflect the racial or ethnic diversity of the populations they serve. Pediatric surgery fellowship training programs are the gateway to the field, and fellow selection processes should be optimized to support diversity and inclusion. The Association of Pediatric Surgery Training Program Directors (APSTPD) Diversity Equity and Inclusion subcommittee compiled best practices for bias mitigation during fellow selection, drawing from published literature and personal experiences in our own programs. A list of concrete recommendations was compiled, which can be implemented in every phase from applicant screening to rank list creation. We present these as a position statement that has been endorsed by the executive committee of the APSTPD. Pediatric surgery fellowship programs can utilize this focused review of best practices to mitigate bias and support diverse applicants.

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