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- Jessica R Santos-Parker, Keli S Santos-Parker, Juan Caceres, Gracia M Vargas, Gifty Kwakye, Michael J Englesbe, and Valeria S M Valbuena.
- University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
- J Surg Educ. 2021 Sep 1; 78 (5): 1413-1418.
ObjectiveUnderrepresented minority (URM) medical students face many educational challenges. Barriers include lack of equitable representation, scarce mentorship, and the effects of systemic racism. For students interested in diversity and health equity, perceptions of surgical culture may discourage pursuing surgical specialties. We describe a national pilot for a novel surgical pipeline program, Leadership Exposure for the Advancement of Gender and Underrepresented Minority Equity in Surgery (LEAGUES), which utilizes early exposure, mentorship, and community building to empower URM students in pursuit of academic surgical careers.DesignA 4-week virtual program included pairing students with faculty research mentors, virtual skills sessions, and seminars on leadership, advocacy, and career development. Participants underwent semi-structured interviews before and after participation, assessing experiences with mentorship and research, interest in surgery, career aspirations, and perceived barriers to career goals.SettingDepartment of Surgery, Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, Michigan.ParticipantsRising second-year medical students.ResultsAll 3 participants were Latinx; 2 were first-generation college students. Participants had no surgical mentorship and limited research exposure, citing a desire to learn research methodology, connect with mentors, and build towards a career working with underserved communities as motivating factors for participation. Perceived barriers to a surgical career included surgical culture, burnout, and lack of research expertise or academic network necessary for success. At completion of the program, participants described several themes: (1) new positive perspective on academic surgical culture, (2) interest and confidence in research, (3) hope for improving health disparities, (4) networking and longitudinal mentorship connections contributing to a sense of surgical community, and (5) eagerness to share resources with colleagues at their home institutions.ConclusionsLEAGUES program participants acquired tools and motivation to pursue careers in surgery, and established valuable longitudinal network and mentor relationships. LEAGUES is a novel model for national surgical pipeline programs.Copyright © 2021 Association of Program Directors in Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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