%0 Journal Article %T Comparison of communication skills between medical students admitted after interviews or on academic merits %A Marie Dahlin %A Stina S£¿derberg %A Ulla Holm %A Ingrid Nilsson %A Lars-Ove Farnebo %J BMC Medical Education %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1472-6920-12-46 %X A retrospective cohort study. Communication skills at a surgical OSCE in 2008 were assessed independently by two observers using an evaluative rating scale. Correlations, t-tests and multivariate analyses by logistic regressions were employed. Academic merits were defined as upper secondary school grade point average (GPA) or scores from the Swedish Scholastic Assessment Test (SweSAT).The risk of showing unsatisfactory communicative performance was significantly lower among the students selected by interviews (OR 0.32, CI95 0.12-0.83), compared to those selected on the basis of academic merits. However, there was no significant difference in communication skills scores between the different admission groups; neither did the proportion of high performers differ. No difference in the result of the written examination was seen between groups.Our results confirm previous experience from many medical schools that students selected in different ways achieve comparable results during the clinical semesters. However, selection through interview seems to reduce the number of students who demonstrate inferior communication skills at 4th year of medical school. %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6920/12/46/abstract