Azizzadeh Ali, McCollum Charles H, Miller Charles C, Holliday Kelly M, Shilstone Holly C, Lucci Anthony
Michael E. DeBakey Department of Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
Curr Surg. 2003 Mar-Apr;60(2):210-3. doi: 10.1016/S0149-7944(02)00679-7.
The number of applicants to general surgery programs has recently declined. We set out to determine factors that influence career choice among medical students.
survey;
university medical center;
fourth-year medical students;
distribution and completion of the survey. PARTICIPANTS ranked 18 items coded on a Likert scale from 1 (not important) to 8 (very important). These factors were career opportunities, academic opportunities, experience on core rotation/subinternship, role model(s) in that specialty (mentors), length of training required, lifestyle during residency, work hours during residency, ability to obtain residency position, concern about loans/debt, call schedule, lifestyle after training, work hours after training, financial rewards after training, intellectual challenge, patient relationships/interaction, prestige, future patient demographics, and gender distribution in the specialty. Students were asked to provide gender, career choice, number of programs they applied to, and the number of programs at which they were interviewed.
A total of 111 of the 160 surveys distributed were returned (69%). A total of 48 of the students were men, 31 were women, and 32 did not identify their gender. Nineteen students were interested in pursuing a career in surgery or a surgical subspecialty. Factors predicting surgery as a career choice were career opportunities (p < 0.04) and prestige (p < 0.003). Lifestyle during residency (p < 0.0007), work hours during residency (p < 0.008), and quality of patient/physician relationships (p < 0.05) were all significantly negatively correlated with the choice of a surgical career. Students pursuing a surgical career applied to greater than 31 programs compared with 11 to 15 for the nonsurgical students (p < 0.0001).
Prestige and career opportunities are more important to students seeking surgical residencies. Concerns about lifestyle and work hours during residency and perceived quality of patient/physician relationships were deterrents to surgery as a career choice. These issues may need to be addressed to increase the number of applicants to surgical programs.
普通外科项目的申请者数量最近有所下降。我们着手确定影响医学生职业选择的因素。
调查;
大学医学中心;
四年级医学生;
发放并完成调查问卷。参与者对18项内容按照李克特量表进行排序,从1(不重要)到8(非常重要)。这些因素包括职业机会、学术机会、核心轮转/实习体验、该专业的榜样(导师)、所需培训时长、住院医师阶段的生活方式、住院医师阶段的工作时长、获得住院医师职位的能力、对贷款/债务的担忧、值班安排、培训后的生活方式、培训后的工作时长、培训后的经济回报、智力挑战、医患关系/互动、声望、未来患者人口统计学特征以及该专业的性别分布。学生们被要求提供性别、职业选择、申请的项目数量以及参加面试的项目数量。
共发放160份调查问卷,回收111份(69%)。其中48名学生为男性,31名学生为女性,32名学生未表明性别。19名学生有意从事外科或外科亚专业的职业。预测选择外科职业的因素为职业机会(p < 0.04)和声望(p < 0.003)。住院医师阶段的生活方式(p < 0.0007)、住院医师阶段的工作时长(p < 0.008)以及医患关系质量(p < 0.05)均与选择外科职业显著负相关。与非外科专业学生申请11至15个项目相比,选择外科职业的学生申请的项目超过31个(p < 0.0001)。
声望和职业机会对寻求外科住院医师职位的学生更为重要。对住院医师阶段生活方式和工作时长的担忧以及对医患关系质量的认知是选择外科职业的阻碍因素。可能需要解决这些问题以增加申请外科项目的人数。