Lambert Emily M, Holmboe Eric S
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York, USA.
Acad Med. 2005 Sep;80(9):797-802. doi: 10.1097/00001888-200509000-00003.
Women have been postulated to be more responsible than men for the recent trend of lifestyle factors influencing the specialty choices of graduating U.S. medical students. The authors looked at the specialty choices of U.S. medical students between 1990 and 2003 to determine whether and to what degree women were responsible for the trends toward controllable lifestyle specialties.
Specialty preference was based on analysis of results from the American Association of Medical Colleges' Medical School Graduation Questionnaire. Specialty lifestyle (controllable vs. uncontrollable) was classified using a standard definition from prior research. A random effects regression model was used to assess differences between men and women in specialty choice over time and the proportion of variability in specialty preference from 1990 to 2003 explained by women.
Overall, a greater proportion of women planned to pursue uncontrollable specialties compared with men in every year analyzed. Both women and men demonstrated a decreasing interest in uncontrollable lifestyle specialties by almost 20%. However, regression analysis found that women were more slightly more likely to choose an uncontrollable lifestyle specialty compared to men over time (p < .01).
Among U.S. medical graduates, women were not more responsible than were men for the trend away from uncontrollable lifestyle specialties over the time period studied. Men and women expressed similar and significant rates of declining interest in specialties with uncontrollable lifestyles.
有人推测,在影响美国医学院毕业生专业选择的生活方式因素的近期趋势中,女性比男性负有更大责任。作者研究了1990年至2003年间美国医学生的专业选择,以确定女性是否以及在何种程度上对可控生活方式专业的趋势负有责任。
专业偏好基于对美国医学院协会医学院毕业调查问卷结果的分析。专业生活方式(可控与不可控)使用先前研究的标准定义进行分类。使用随机效应回归模型评估不同时间男性和女性在专业选择上的差异,以及1990年至2003年间女性在专业偏好中所占的变异比例。
总体而言,在每年的分析中,计划从事不可控专业的女性比例高于男性。男性和女性对不可控生活方式专业的兴趣都下降了近20%。然而,回归分析发现,随着时间的推移,女性比男性更有可能选择不可控生活方式专业(p <.01)。
在研究期间,在美国医学毕业生中,女性对远离不可控生活方式专业的趋势并不比男性负有更大责任。男性和女性对不可控生活方式专业的兴趣下降率相似且显著。