Advising Medical Students During COVID-19: The Case for a Single Emergency Medicine Rotation for All.
COMMENTARY AND PERSPECTIVE
Advising Medical Students During COVID19: The Case for a Single Emergency
Medicine Rotation for All
Jamie Shandro, MD, MPH , Ross Kessler, MD, Caitlin Schrepel, MD, and
Joshua Jauregui, MD
T
he COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the usual
approach to exploring and applying into emergency medicine (EM) for medical students. On March
17, 2020, the American Association of Medical Colleges issued guidance strongly suggesting that medical
students be removed from direct patient care.1 Many
medical schools removed medical students from clerkships and postponed hosting visiting medical students
indefinitely. An informal query of EM clerkship directors on the Clerkship Directors in Emergency Medicine listserv confirmed this trend in EM, with a clear
majority of respondents pulling their students from
clinical rotations and halting visiting student rotations.
For many EM-bound medical students, the crucial
spring time period to explore and focus in EM
became a vacuum and the standard advice for how to
successfully apply in EM was insufficient. With no
change in the Electronic Residency Application Service
(ERAS) timeline at this moment, the timeline compressed for students to prepare for their application.
This disruption forced many educators to reexamine
their advising paradigm for medical students applying
into EM.
PRE–COVID-19 STANDARDS
Program director surveys routinely demonstrate that
evaluations from EM rotations, specifically group
standardized letters of evaluation (SLOEs) from home
and away rotations, are the highest weighted factors
in consideration of an EM residency application.2–6
Because of this, expectations have evolved such that
EM residency applicants are commonly advised and
expected to complete two EM rotations to be competitive.7 This typically means completing one rotation
at their home institution and one away rotation. A
positive evaluation on an away rotation offers supporting evidence of translatable skills and can be
seen as providing a less biased assessment of a student’s potential to be a successful EM resident than
a SLOE from a home rotation. However, the process
of applying for and completing an away rotation can
be competitive, expensive, and unpredictable for students.8
RATIONALE FOR A SINGLE ROTATION
Given the increasingly competitive nature of obtaining
away rotations, finding two EM rotations for all interested EM candidates had already become challenging.
COVID-19 amplified this challenge. Our EM student
programs team supports the Council of Emergency
Medicine Residency Directors Advising Students Committee in EM consensus statement that programs
should be understanding about a single EM rotation
and SLOE in this unprecedented year.9 We strongly
advocate for our national EM community to go one
step beyond this statement and to align in a unified
From the Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Received April 21, 2020; revision received April 23, 2020; accepted April 24, 2020.
The authors have no relevant financial information or potential conflicts to disclose.
Supervising Editor: Wendy C. Coates, MD.
*Address for correspondence and reprints: Jamie Shandro MD MPH; e-mail: .
AEM EDUCATION AND TRAINING 2020;4:318–320
318
ISSN 2472-5390
© 2020 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
doi: 10.1002/aet2.10459
AEM EDUCATION AND TRAINING • July 2020, Vol. 4, No. 3 • www.aem-e-t.com
equitable recommendation for a single EM rotation
for all EM-bound students.
We recommend a single EM rotation for all applicants for the following reasons:
1. Equity. Away rotations in EM are a limited
resource, and combined with travel restrictions
there is significant potential inequity among students as they seek rotation experiences in a compressed time frame. We believe that students from
“orphan” programs with no home EM residency
program deserve first access to an away rotation,
giving them the opportunity to obtain the critical
single SLOE for their application. By focusing
home students on rotating at their home program,
this can open the door for students who need an
away rotation the most.
2. Wellness. The significant emotional and financial
stress of applying for away rotations that is typical
of previous years is exponentially compounded this
year. We anticipate that it will be exceptionally difficult this year for students to obtain away rotations. We also recognize that students applying for
away rotations may go through the entire process
only to have their away rotation canceled. A noaway-rotation policy with a written explanation in
SLOEs may mitigate this stress.
3. Need for flexibility. There is still uncertainty at many
institutions about when direct patient care experiences for medical students will resume. We must
ensure that all medical students interested in EM
secure one spot to rotate this summer in time for
clerkship teams to draft SLOEs prior to ERAS opening. For this to happen, complete schedule flexibility
of EM-bound students is of paramount importance.
4. Safety. We do not anticipate the risks of COVID19 to disappear entirely this summer. We acknowledge the personal protective equipment (PPE) limitations that many institutions are facing right now,
and we know that supply of and policies around
PPE vary from institution to institution. While we
expect any institution accepting away rotators to
make efforts to ensure student safety, we recognize
that it is difficult to ensure a consistent standard of
PPE protection across all institutions.
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rotations for your own students. We offer our experience as an example in guiding this process. Working
together with the medical school dean’s office, we canceled all EM away rotations for our students for the
rest of the calendar year.
To implement this time-sensitive decision, EM student programs teams must coordinate closely with the
dean’s office. At our institution, we had multiple meetings outlining the considerations above and coming to
consensus on the best plan for our students and educational community. We provided registration with a
list of our EM-interested students who were then given
priority for summer clerkship spots in our required
EM rotation. All students applying in other disciplines
were moved from summer spots to rotation dates later
in the year. Even with these schedule adjustments, we
additionally had to overload our clerkship by two or
three students per month and fine-tune the schedule
and curriculum to be able to fit our EM-interested students into this compressed time frame and ensure adequate clinical exposure for their rotation experience.
This process requires enhanced communication
with EM-interested medical students. It is critical to
prioritize clear, consistent communication to students
from EM student programs and the dean’s office.
Here we held several online group advising sessions.
Students had many insightful questions about the noaway rotation policy, and we had open discussions
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