New England Journal of Medicine research presents a striking finding: zero percent performance difference between residents selected through virtual interviews and those chosen via traditional in-person formats. This comprehensive analysis tracked multiple residency programs and measured standardized performance indicators across specialties, including clinical competency evaluations and board examination passage rates.
Beyond equivalent outcomes, virtual interview formats deliver significant financial benefits. Applicants save $8,000-$15,000 per residency application by eliminating travel, accommodation, and associated expenses. This cost reduction democratizes access to competitive residency positions, potentially increasing diversity among selected candidates.
The data challenge long-held assumptions that face-to-face interactions are essential for accurate selection decisions in medical training. With 32 percent of programs already operating virtual-only interviews and 58 percent adopting hybrid models, these research findings provide robust evidence supporting continued virtual and hybrid interview adoption without sacrificing program quality standards.
Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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