Dhalla Irfan A, Kwong Jeff C, Streiner David L, Baddour Ralph E, Waddell Andrea E, Johnson Ian L
University of Toronto, Ont.
CMAJ. 2002 Apr 16;166(8):1029-35.
The demographic and socioeconomic profile of medical school classes has implications for where people choose to practise and whether they choose to treat certain disadvantaged groups. We aimed to describe the demographic and socioeconomic characteristics of first-year Canadian medical students and compare them with those of the Canadian population to determine whether there are groups that are over- or underrepresented. Furthermore, we wished to test the hypothesis that medical students often come from privileged socioeconomic backgrounds.
As part of a larger Internet survey of all students at Canadian medical schools outside Quebec, conducted in January and February 2001, first-year students were asked to give their age, sex, self-described ethnic background using Statistics Canada census descriptions and educational background. Postal code at the time of high school graduation served as a proxy for socioeconomic status. Respondents were also asked for estimates of parental income and education. Responses were compared when possible with Canadian age-group-matched data from the 1996 census.
Responses were obtained from 981 (80.2%) of 1223 first-year medical students. There were similar numbers of male and female students (51.1% female), with 65% aged 20 to 24 years. Although there were more people from visible minorities in medical school than in the Canadian population (32.4% v. 20.0%) (p < 0.001), certain minority groups (black and Aboriginal) were underrepresented, and others (Chinese, South Asian) were overrepresented. Medical students were less likely than the Canadian population to come from rural areas (10.8% v. 22.4%) (p< 0.001) and were more likely to have higher socioeconomic status, as measured by parents' education (39.0% of fathers and 19.4% of mothers had a master's or doctoral degree, as compared with 6.6% and 3.0% respectively of the Canadian population aged 45 to 64), parents' occupation (69.3% of fathers and 48.7% of mothers were professionals or high-level managers, as compared with 12.0% of Canadians) and household income (15.4% of parents had annual household incomes less than $40,000, as compared with 39.7% of Canadian households; 17.0% of parents had household incomes greater than $160,000, as compared with 2.7% of Canadian households with an income greater than $150,000). Almost half (43.5%) of the medical students came from neighbourhoods with median family incomes in the top quintile (p < 0.001). A total of 57.7% of the respondents had completed 4 years or less of postsecondary studies before medical school, and 29.3% had completed 6 or more years. The parents of the medical students tended to have occupations with higher social standing than did working adult Canadians; a total of 15.6% of the respondents had a physician parent.
Canadian medical students differ significantly from the general population, particularly with regard to ethnic background and socioeconomic status.
医学院班级的人口统计学和社会经济概况会影响人们选择执业的地点以及他们是否选择治疗某些弱势群体。我们旨在描述加拿大一年级医学生的人口统计学和社会经济特征,并将他们与加拿大人口的特征进行比较,以确定是否存在代表性过高或过低的群体。此外,我们希望检验医学生通常来自享有特权的社会经济背景这一假设。
作为2001年1月和2月对魁北克以外加拿大医学院所有学生进行的一项更大规模互联网调查的一部分,一年级学生被要求提供他们的年龄、性别、使用加拿大统计局人口普查描述的自我描述种族背景以及教育背景。高中毕业时的邮政编码用作社会经济地位的替代指标。还询问了受访者对父母收入和教育程度的估计。尽可能将回答与1996年人口普查中加拿大年龄组匹配的数据进行比较。
从1223名一年级医学生中的981名(80.2%)获得了回复。男女生人数相似(女生占51.1%),65%的学生年龄在20至24岁之间。尽管医学院中来自少数族裔的人数比加拿大人口中多(32.4%对20.0%)(p<0.001),但某些少数群体(黑人及原住民)代表性不足,而其他群体(华裔、南亚裔)代表性过高。与加拿大人口相比,医学生来自农村地区的可能性较小(10.8%对22.4%)(p<0.