Published in I.D.E.A.S.
Author Joseph L'Huillier

This is a preprint of a manuscript currently under peer review. Abstract Importance: Gossip, defined by social scientists as “evaluative talk about an absent third party,” is anecdotally pervasive, yet poorly understood in surgical residency programs. Objective: This study sought to deconstruct the role of gossip in surgical residency and evaluate its impact through the lens of surgical residents.