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- Bradley M Gray, Rebecca S Lipner, Robert O Roswell, Alicia Fernandez, Jonathan L Vandergrift, and Marcella Alsan.
- American Board of Internal Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (B.M.G., R.S.L., J.L.V.).
- Ann. Intern. Med. 2024 Jan 1; 177 (1): 708270-82.
BackgroundThe 2014 adoption of the Milestone ratings system may have affected evaluation bias against minoritized groups.ObjectiveTo assess bias in internal medicine (IM) residency knowledge ratings against Black or Latino residents-who are underrepresented in medicine (URiM)-and Asian residents before versus after Milestone adoption in 2014.DesignCross-sectional and interrupted time-series comparisons.SettingU.S. IM residencies.Participants59 835 IM residents completing residencies during 2008 to 2013 and 2015 to 2020.InterventionAdoption of the Milestone ratings system.MeasurementsPre-Milestone (2008 to 2013) and post-Milestone (2015 to 2020) bias was estimated as differences in standardized knowledge ratings between U.S.-born and non-U.S.-born minoritized groups versus non-Latino U.S.-born White (NLW) residents, with adjustment for performance on the American Board of Internal Medicine IM certification examination and other physician characteristics. Interrupted time-series analysis measured deviations from pre-Milestone linear bias trends.ResultsDuring the pre-Milestone period, ratings biases against minoritized groups were large (-0.40 SDs [95% CI, -0.48 to -0.31 SDs; P < 0.001] for URiM residents, -0.24 SDs [CI, -0.30 to -0.18 SDs; P < 0.001] for U.S.-born Asian residents, and -0.36 SDs [CI, -0.45 to -0.27 SDs; P < 0.001] for non-U.S.-born Asian residents). These estimates decreased to less than -0.15 SDs after adoption of Milestone ratings for all groups except U.S.-born Black residents, among whom substantial (though lower) bias persisted (-0.26 SDs [CI, -0.36 to -0.17 SDs; P < 0.001]). Substantial deviations from pre-Milestone linear bias trends coincident with adoption of Milestone ratings were also observed.LimitationsUnobserved variables correlated with ratings bias and Milestone ratings adoption, changes in identification of race/ethnicity, and generalizability to Milestones 2.0.ConclusionKnowledge ratings bias against URiM and Asian residents was ameliorated with the adoption of the Milestone ratings system. However, substantial ratings bias against U.S.-born Black residents persisted.Primary Funding SourceNone.
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