id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-340887-k88hchau Khusid, Johnathan A. Well‐Being and Education of Urology Residents During the COVID‐19 Pandemic: Results of an American National Survey 2020-05-27 .txt text/plain 3041 160 42 To address this gap, in the current study we aim to assess the well-being, clinical practice, and education of urology residents throughout the USA during the COVID-19 pandemic through the use of an anonymous survey. Potential risk factors included: resident age, gender identity, level of training, practice setting (urban/suburban/rural), AUA geographical section, perception of local COVID-19 severity (Likert), marital status, children, perceived household susceptibility to disease (Likert), history of COVID-19 symptoms, months of intensive care unit training, redeployment status, perceptions of availability of PPE (Likert) and COVID-19 testing, cancellation of elective cases, number of weekly operations before the pandemic, perceived program and hospital support (Likert), perception of shared responsibility with attendings (Likert), and perceived difficulty meeting case minimums (Likert). Perception of support from hospital administration (β=-0.23, 95% CI=-0.40, -0.05) and shared responsibility between residents and attendings (β=-0.22, 95% CI=-0.39, -0.07) were associated with lower declination of redeployment whereas concern regarding ability to reach graduation case requirements was associated with higher declination of redeployment (β=0.16, 95% CI=0.00, 0.32). ./cache/cord-340887-k88hchau.txt ./txt/cord-340887-k88hchau.txt