Background Previous work has demonstrated letters of recommendation for women in academic medicine are shorter and emphasize communal traits over grindstone or agentic traits. Objective To determine if there are sex-based differences in letters of recommendation written for applicants applying to pulmonary critical care medicine fellowships and if the sex of the letter writer impacts these differences. Methods All fellowship applications submitted to a pulmonary critical care medicine fellowship program in 2020 were included in this study. The applicant demographics and self-reported accomplishments were extracted from their application. The sex of letter writers was identified through public online searches. Word count and language differences in the letters of recommendation were analyzed for each applicant using the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC2015) program. Multivariable linear regressions were performed controlling for applicant characteristics to identify if applicant sex was associated with total word counts and total agentic word counts. Results Of the 529 complete applications, 2,024 letters of recommendation were reviewed. A majority of the applicants (70%, n = 370/530) and letter writers (75%, n = 1,515/2,024) were male. When adjusting for applicant demographic and accomplishments, female applicants had longer letters of recommendation (30.91 words longer, 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.53–60.29; P = 0.04) and more supportive letters (3.27 words longer, 95% CI, 1.59–4.95; P < 0.01) as compared with male applicants. Female letter writers wrote longer and more supportive letters than male letter writers, and this difference was greatest for female applicants. Conclusion Female applicants received longer and more supportive letters of recommendation. Further work is needed to understand if this finding is the beginning of a change in the letters of recommendation for female applicants.
Background International Medical Graduates (IMGs) encounter barriers as they seek to match into fellowship programs in the United States (US). This study’s objective is to determine if there are differences in letters of recommendation written for IMGs compared to U.S. Medical Graduates (USMGs) applying to pulmonary and critical care medicine (PCCM) fellowship programs. Methods All applications submitted to a PCCM fellowship program in 2021 were included in this study. The applicant demographics and accomplishments were mined from applications. The gender of letter writers was identified by the author’s pronouns on professional websites. Word count and language differences in the letters were analyzed for each applicant using the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LWIC2015) program. Multivariable linear regressions were performed controlling for applicant characteristics to identify if IMG status was associated with total word count and degree of support, measured by a composite outcome encompassing several categories of adjectives, compared to USMG status. Results Of the 573 applications, most of the applicants were USMGs (72%, N = 334/573). When adjusting for applicant characteristics, IMG applicants had shorter letters of recommendation (87.81 total words shorter 95% CI: − 118.61, − 57.00, p-value < 0.01) and less supportive letters (4.79 composite words shorter 95% CI: − 6.61, − 2.97, p-value < 0.01), as compared to USMG applicants. Notably, female IMG applicants had the biggest difference in their word counts compared to USMG applicants when the letter writer was a man. Conclusions IMG applicants to a PCCM fellowship received shorter and less supportive letters of recommendation compared to USMG applicants.
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