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. 2021 Feb 18;21:118. doi: 10.1186/s12909-021-02543-9

Table 1.

Baseline characteristics of early graduate medical students who worked as COVID-19 junior physicians and those who did not, May 2020a

Characteristic: Junior physician (n = 39) Non-junior physician (n = 20) Pb Cramer’s Vc
Age, mean [SD], years 28 [2] 27 [2] 0.52
Gender, n (%) 0.71
 Female 21 (54) 10 (50)
 Male 16 (41) 10 (50)
 Other 2 (5) 0
Matched GME specialty, n (%) 0.02 0.38
 Surgical 19 (49) 7 (35)
 Medical 14 (36) 3 (15)
 Hospital-based 6 (15) 10 (50)
Distance to matched residency program, n (%) 0.58
  < 50 miles 20 (51) 7 (35)
 50 to 100 miles 5 (13) 2 (10)
 101 to 200 miles 3 (8) 2 (10)
  > 200 miles 11 (28) 9 (45)
Home cohabitants. n (%) 0.02 0.42
 None 22 (56) 6 (32)
 Significant other (SO) 11 (28) 3 (15)
 Parents 6 (15) 8 (42)
 Children and SO or parents 0 2 (11)
COVID-19 status prior to work period, n (%)
 Tested positive 5 (13) 0 0.16
Family encouragement to work as JP, n (%) 0.02 0.35
 Encouraged 7 (18) 0
 Discouraged 10 (26) 11 (55)
 Neither encouraged nor discouraged 22 (56) 9 (45)
Felt Pressure to Work as JP, n (%), yes 6 (15) 9 (45) 0.03 0.32

Abbreviations: COVID-19 Coronavirus disease 2019, GME Graduate Medical Education, IQR interquartile range, JP Junior Physician, SD standard deviation, SO significant other

aIncludes sample of early medical school graduates eligible to work as Junior Physicians at NYU Langone Hospital – Long Island and Stony Brook University Hospital during the initial peak in cases in the COVID-19 pandemic in New York State

bCategorical data were compared using the Fisher exact probability test. Continuous data (age) was compared using t tests for independent samples with an assumption of unequal variance

cCramer’s V standard interpretation for effect size: small association [0.10–0.29]; medium association [0.30–0.49]; large association [0.50–1.00]