Shifty B (and any other attendings perusing this forum), I would love to hear your honest opinion on reputations of residents and fellows coming out of programs. Particularly, are there any more "Top 30" programs that are known for producing slow residents? This is something that is hard to judge for us M4's traveling the interview trail.
This is a tough question to answer. For academic attendings, there are definitely faster and slower fellows, but it's not usually fair to compare them. For instance, I could say that the fellows from smaller programs are slower... but they're coming to a bigger center and seeing cases and situations that they've never seen before. It's good that they're slower; if they handled tertiary referral cases as fast as a rule out stone study, then there's something wrong (i.e. they have no idea what they could be missing on the more complex case and give it too little time). Some residents are fast because they're just sloppy (i.e. constant typos, template errors, poor descriptions). This is artificial speed because once you become an attending, you will have to slow down to fix those things or get endless calls / lose referrals, so might as well dictate appropriately from the get go.
A lot of speed is based on confidence. Confidence should be earned through a lot of experience.
Speed variability is dependent on (in no particular order):
- an individual's risk tolerance (often this is artificial speed. Many residents have a high risk tolerance. I would/did too, if all my liability fell on someone else)
- relative departmental teaching strength. If a place is known for good teaching in a certain area, then residents justifiably have higher confidence in that area --> faster in that area. This doesn't translate to all areas.
- individual aggressiveness (aggressive in taking cases and pushing yourself)
- breadth of cases seen in training / experience
- the amount of independent reading time probably helps
Speed differences between residents often sort themselves out at the end of fellowship, but not always. Differences after that point depend mostly on individual personality factors.