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Well, in pediatrics and in particular pediatric critical care, few applicants have any publications. Additionally, the PhD usually means the applicants are better critical thinkers (in my opinion). And lastly, they at least have a career plan, even it doesn’t work out for various reasons. In pediatric critical care, many applicants for faculty positions generally only have the 3 P attributes (pink, peeing, pulses... ie a warm body), so a PhD application is usually far above the rest of the pack.Absolutely. I doubt there'll be any reduction in the number of trainees, for the reasons @tr mentioned. I'm thankful that resident slot numbers are capped in this country. There is not an equivalent of this mechanism for PhDs.
Out of curiosity, what do you usually find to be better about their resume...? Seems that MD/PhDs have far less time to accumulate publications than people who are PhD-only, though it does seem slightly easier for physician scientists to acquire early career grants.
This is just in reference to pediatric critical care though and I don’t doubt different specialities have different bars.