Goldacre M J, Lambert T W
Department of Public Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Med Educ. 2000 Sep;34(9):700-7. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2923.2000.00667.x.
To report on stability and change in career choices of doctors, between 1 and 3 years after qualification.
Postal questionnaire surveys.
United Kingdom.
All doctors who qualified in the United Kingdom in 1993.
Choices of eventual career expressed 1 and 3 years after qualifying.
The overall pattern of career choices at year 3 differed a little from that at year 1. For example, choices for general practice increased from 26% to 29%, choices for medical specialties fell from 22% to 18%, and for surgical specialties they fell from 17% to 14%. However, because changes of choice between specialties tended to 'cancel out', the aggregated data masked much larger changes when considered at the level of individual doctors. Overall, 74% of respondents retained their year 1 career choice in year 3 (78% of men, 70% of women). Of doctors who chose a hospital specialty in year 1, 71% chose the same specialty in year 3, 18% had switched choice to another hospital specialty, and 9% had switched choice to general practice. The percentage who changed choice from hospital specialties to general practice between years 1 and 3 was lower in the 1993 cohort than in all previous cohorts. Of those whose year 1 choice of long-term career was general practice, 89% retained that choice in year 3 and 11% switched to other branches of medicine. Even by year 3, less than half of all respondents (and a smaller percentage of women than men) signified that their long-term choice of specialty was definite. In year 3, 78% of all respondents, and 79% of doctors from homes in the United Kingdom, intended definitely or probably to practise medicine in the United Kingdom for the foreseeable future, which represented little change from the figures in year 1.
About a quarter of doctors change their career choice between years 1 and 3 after qualification, and less than half regard their choice in year 3 as definite. Flexibility is therefore needed, well beyond the first post-qualification year, to accommodate changes of choice. Where training opportunities in a hospital specialty are limited, doctors are now inclining, more than in the past, to switch to an alternative hospital specialty rather than to general practice.
报告医生在获得资格后的1至3年期间职业选择的稳定性及变化情况。
邮寄问卷调查。
英国。
所有于1993年在英国获得资格的医生。
获得资格1年及3年后最终职业选择情况。
第3年的职业选择总体模式与第1年略有不同。例如,选择全科医疗的比例从26%增至29%,选择医学专科的比例从22%降至18%,选择外科专科的比例从17%降至14%。然而,由于专科之间的选择变化往往相互抵消,汇总数据掩盖了个体医生层面更大的变化。总体而言,74%的受访者在第3年保留了其第1年的职业选择(男性为78%,女性为70%)。在第1年选择医院专科的医生中,71%在第3年选择了相同的专科,18%转而选择了另一个医院专科,9%转而选择了全科医疗。1993年队列中在第1年至第3年期间从医院专科转而选择全科医疗的比例低于之前所有队列。那些第1年长期职业选择为全科医疗的人中,89%在第3年保留了该选择,11%转而选择了医学的其他分支。甚至到第3年,所有受访者中不到一半(女性比例低于男性)表示其专科的长期选择已确定。在第3年,78%的所有受访者以及79%来自英国家庭的医生打算在可预见的未来肯定或可能在英国行医,这与第1年的数据相比变化不大。
约四分之一的医生在获得资格后的1至3年期间改变职业选择,不到一半的人认为其第3年的选择已确定。因此,除资格后的第一年外,还需要很大的灵活性来适应选择的变化。在医院专科培训机会有限的情况下,与过去相比,医生现在更倾向于转而选择另一个医院专科而非全科医疗。