The prevalence and cost of medical student visiting rotations
Winterton et al. BMC Medical Education (2016) 16:291
DOI 10.1186/s12909-016-0805-z
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Open Access
The prevalence and cost of medical
student visiting rotations
Matthew Winterton, Jaimo Ahn and Joseph Bernstein*
Abstract
Background: Performance on visiting rotations during the senior year of medical school is consistently cited
by residency program directors as a critical factor in selecting residents. Nevertheless, the frequency with which
visiting rotations are undertaken and the associated financial costs they impose have not been systematically
examined.
Method: Under the auspices of the Electronic Residency Application Service, a survey was sent in March 2015 to all U.
S. applicants for residency programs in the 2014-15 academic year. Students were asked how many visiting rotations
they performed; the estimated cost of performing each rotation; their perception of their educational value
and primary motivation for performing them; and the Match outcome of their residency application.
Results: The survey was completed by 2817 applicants, yielding a response rate of 11.3 %. 1898 applicants
(67.4 %) performed visiting rotations: 647 applicants (30.0 %) performed one; 640 (22.7 %) performed two; 322
(11.4 %) performed three; and 289 (10.3 %) reported four or more. When accounting for potential response bias, the
true prevalence of away rotators was estimated to be 58.7 % of all fourth-year medical students (95 % CI 54.0–63.4 %).
The mean number of rotations for participating students was 2.1. Most students performed rotations equally
as an audition for residency placement and for education, with some of the more competitive subspecialties
reporting more of an audition experience. The mean estimated cost for performing a single rotation was
$958. Thirty-six percent of applicants reported matching at an institution where they had rotated, either their
home institution or one at which a visiting rotation was performed.
Conclusions: Visiting rotations are prevalent, expensive, and only partly educational. As such, these rotations
may impede optimal use of the senior year of medical school and limited student financial resources.
Keywords: Visiting student rotation, Away rotation, Residency, Residency application, Medical school, Medical
education
Background
According to Ludmerer, the basic structure of medical school curricula was established in the 19th century: “The first 2 years contained the pre-clinical
disciplines….[and the] last 2 years provided instruction in the various clinical subjects” [1]. Within that
broad partition, the initial 2 years were subdivided
into the study of normal biology in the first year and
diseases in the second; and within the latter half, the
third year was devoted to “major” clerkships and the
fourth year left open for electives.
Although the fourth year has been “relatively ignored in curricular reforms” [2], it has been implicitly
modified by changes made to the other years’ content
and structure. For one thing, at many schools, traditional third year clinical clerkships now start before
the third academic year. (At our institution, clerkships
begin in January of the second year.) And because the
clerkships likewise end earlier, the fourth year is for
many students an expanded 18 month-long segment,
replete with opportunities for electives.
One such opportunity opened to students is the
freedom to visit other medical schools, outside of the
* Correspondence:
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine, 424 Stemmler Hall, Philadelphia, USA
© The Author(s). 2016 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and
reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to
the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver
(http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
Winterton et al. BMC Medical Education (2016) 16:291
students’ home institution, often in conjunction with
application to residency programs [3]. We have observed informally that visiting rotations have become
increasingly popular. At our home institution, for example, over the years 2012 to 2015, there was a near
doubling of the number of visiting rotations [Helene
Weinberg, Registrar; personal communication]. Along
those lines, in the 2014–2015 application cycle alone,
129,874 applications for visiting rotations were submitted by 13,273 applicants through the Visiting
Student Application Service [Association of American
Medical Colleges Visiting Student Application Service
Database, as of 5/28/2015. Last updated 5/28/2015].
There is, of course, a good reason for the popularity
of visiting rotations among students: namely, the popularity of visiting rotations among program directors
who select residents. Surveys of program directors [4–9]
demonstrate that performance on a visiting rotation is
one of the most important factors in selecting candidates for interview [10], especially in some competitive specialties [8, 11].
Despite the apparent increasing importance of visiting
rotations in residency placement, we have found no reports of the overall prevalence of these visiting rotations;
and while there have been reports on their purported
benefits [12], we have not found reports on the costs associated with performing these visiting electives. We address these questions here.
Methods
Under the auspices of the Electronic Residency Application Service (ERAS®, the Association of American Medical
Colleges service for residency applications) an anonymous
web-based survey was sent in March 2015 to all U.S. applicants for allopathic residency programs in the 2014-15
academic year. This survey asked students how many visiting rotations they performed; the estimated dollar cost of
performing each visiting rotation; their perception of the
educational value of these rotations; and the match outcome of their residency application.
Pearson’s chi-square test was used to examine the
goodness-of-fit of the distribution of respondents disclosing their primary specialty in which they applied and
the actual distribution of applicants within each specialty
nationally, as gathered by the National Resident Matching
Program® [13]. Significance level was set at P = 0.05.
Statistical analysis was performed using Microsoft Excel
(Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA).
To evaluate potential non-response bias, we distributed a second survey 2 weeks later to those students
who did not originally respond asking how many visiting
rotations they performed. Using a variable response propensity model [14] to correct for survey non-response,
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we estimated the propor (...truncated)