Longitudinal Experience With a Transparent Weighted Lottery System to Incentivize Resident Scholarship
- PMID: 30154979
- PMCID: PMC6108350
- DOI: 10.4300/JGME-D-18-00036.1
Longitudinal Experience With a Transparent Weighted Lottery System to Incentivize Resident Scholarship
Abstract
Background: Promoting resident scholarship is important to programs. Positive Peer-Pressured Productivity (P-QUAD) is a dual incentive model that combines increased transparency through awareness of peers' engagement in scholarship, with a weighted cash lottery where tickets are earned for various dimensions of academic success (ie, 1 point/ticket for an abstract submission up to 6 for manuscript acceptance).
Objective: We explored whether a weighted lottery system contributes to sustained increases in academic productivity in a residency program.
Methods: We implemented P-QUAD in 1 pediatrics residency program in July 2015. Residents reported their scholarship submissions/acceptances for the prior year, establishing a program baseline. During the 2-year intervention, residents logged their academic submissions/acceptances on a web interface where they could view real-time scores and the work of their peers. At the end of each academic year, we compared P-QUAD points for each category to baseline.
Results: During the intervention, 31% of residents (68 of 218) reported engaging in scholarship. Using P-QUAD was acceptable to most residents. Engagement in scholarship across the program, as measured by total P-QUAD score, increased 53% from baseline (329 versus 504 points per year). Mean submission and acceptance rates for individual residents reporting research through P-QUAD increased across all categories, ranging from 19% for abstract submissions (1.62 to 1.93 per year) to 275% (0.24 to 0.90 per year) for accepted manuscripts.
Conclusions: The residency program sustained gains in academic productivity at the program-wide and participating resident level in the 2 years since implementing P-QUAD.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflict of interest: The authors declare they have no competing interests. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
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References
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- Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. Common Program Requirements. July 1, 2017. http://www.acgme.org/Portals/0/PFAssets/ProgramRequirements/CPRs_2017-07... Accessed July 6, 2018.
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- Vinci RJ, Bauchner H, Finkelstein J, et al. Research during pediatric residency training: outcome of a senior resident block rotation. Pediatrics. 2009;124(4):1126–1134. - PubMed
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