Diehl Andrew K, Kumar Vineeta, Gateley Ann, Appleby Jane L, O'Keefe Mary E
Division of General Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2006 Oct;21(10):1045-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2006.00556.x. Epub 2006 Jul 7.
Sociodemographic factors and personality attributes predict career decisions in medical students. Determinants of internal medicine residents' specialty choices have received little attention.
To identify factors that predict the clinical practice of residents following their training.
Prospective cohort study.
Two hundred and four categorical residents from 2 university-based residency programs.
Sociodemographic and personality inventories performed during residency, and actual careers 4 to 9 years later.
International medical school graduates (IMGs) were less likely to practice general medicine than U.S. graduates (33.3% vs 70.6%, P < .001). Residents with higher loan indebtedness more often became generalists (P = .001). A corresponding trend favoring general internal medicine was observed among those who perceived General Internists to have lower potential incomes (69.0% vs 53.3%, P = .08). There was a trend for generalists to have lower scores on scales measuring authoritarianism, negative orientation to psychological problems, and Machiavellianism (0.05 < P < .10). In a logistic regression, graduation from a U.S. medical school (odds ratio [OR] 3.02; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.00 to 9.10, P = .049) and perception of low future income (OR 1.65; 95% CI, 1.06 to 2.56, P = .03) predicted entry into general medicine, with trends apparent for higher debt (P = .05) and greater comfort caring for patients with psychological problems (P = .07).
Recruitment of IMGs may not increase the supply of General Internists. Prospects of lower income, even in the face of large debt, may not discourage residents from becoming generalists. If increasing generalist manpower is a goal, residencies should consider weighing applicants' personal attributes during the selection process.
社会人口统计学因素和人格特质可预测医学生的职业决策。内科住院医师专业选择的决定因素很少受到关注。
确定预测住院医师培训后临床实践的因素。
前瞻性队列研究。
来自两个大学住院医师培训项目的204名分类住院医师。
住院期间进行的社会人口统计学和人格量表评估,以及4至9年后的实际职业情况。
国际医学院毕业生(IMGs)从事普通内科的可能性低于美国毕业生(33.3%对70.6%,P<.001)。贷款债务较高的住院医师更常成为全科医生(P=.001)。在那些认为普通内科医生潜在收入较低的人中,也观察到了倾向于普通内科的相应趋势(69.0%对53.3%,P=.08)。全科医生在测量权威主义、对心理问题的消极取向和权谋主义的量表上得分较低,存在一定趋势(0.05<P<.10)。在逻辑回归中,毕业于美国医学院(优势比[OR]3.02;95%置信区间[CI],1.00至9.10,P=.049)和对未来低收入的认知(OR 1.65;95%CI,1.06至2.56,P=.03)预测进入普通内科,债务较高(P=.05)和更愿意照顾有心理问题的患者(P=.07)的趋势也很明显。
招募国际医学院毕业生可能不会增加普通内科医生的供应。即使面临高额债务,较低收入的前景可能也不会阻止住院医师成为全科医生。如果增加全科医生人力是一个目标,住院医师培训项目在选拔过程中应考虑权衡申请人的个人特质。