Buddeberg-Fischer Barbara, Dietz Claudia, Klaghofer Richard, Buddeberg Claus
Department of Psychosocial Medicine, Zurich University Hospital, Haldenbachstrasse 18, CH-8091 Zürich, Switzerland.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2006 Aug 14;6:98. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-6-98.
In some Western countries, the medical profession is continuously losing prestige, doctors are claiming of high demands, low rewards, and difficult structural working conditions. This study aimed to investigate the arguments given by Swiss residents for and against a career in medicine.
As part of a prospective cohort study of Swiss medical school graduates on career development, 567 fourth-year residents were asked to answer the free-response item of what arguments there still were in favour of or against a career in medicine. They also indicated whether they would choose the medical profession all over again (yes/no). The statements were transcribed, content categories inductively formulated, and their descriptions written down in a code manual. Arguments were encoded according to the code manual and assigned to eight content categories (Mayring's content analysis). Frequency distributions were given for categories and tested with Chi2-tests for differences in gender, speciality fields, and whether or not the respondent would again choose a career in medicine.
The 567 participants made 1,640 statements in favour of and 1,703 statements against a career in medicine. The content analysis of the residents' answers yielded eight categories with arguments both for and against a career in medicine. Of all "statements for" responses, 70% fell into the two top-ranking categories of Personal experiences in day-to-day working life (41.2%) and Interpersonal experiences in professional relationships (28.8%). The top-ranking category of the "statements against" arguments was General work-related structural conditions (32%), followed by Social prestige and health-policy aspects (21%). Main arguments in favour of a career in medicine were interdisciplinary challenge, combination of basic sciences and interpersonal concerns, helping suffering people, guarantee of a secure job; arguments against comprised high workload, time pressure, emotional stress, poorly structured continuing education, increasing bureaucracy, work-life imbalance, low income, and decreasing social prestige. The statements revealed few differences depending on gender, medical field, and attitude towards choosing the medical profession again; one out of five young doctors would not do so.
Residents' chief complaint is deteriorating structural working conditions, including unfavourable work-life balance. Making medicine an attractive profession again will require sustainable changes in health-policy framework and social reward.
在一些西方国家,医学职业的威望不断下降,医生们声称要求高、回报低且工作结构条件艰难。本研究旨在调查瑞士住院医师支持和反对医学职业的理由。
作为对瑞士医学院毕业生职业发展的前瞻性队列研究的一部分,567名四年级住院医师被要求回答关于支持或反对医学职业的理由的自由回答项。他们还表明是否会再次选择医学职业(是/否)。陈述被转录,归纳制定内容类别,并在编码手册中写下其描述。根据编码手册对理由进行编码,并分配到八个内容类别(迈林的内容分析)。给出类别频率分布,并使用卡方检验测试性别、专业领域以及受访者是否会再次选择医学职业方面的差异。
567名参与者做出了1640条支持医学职业的陈述和1703条反对医学职业的陈述。对住院医师答案的内容分析产生了八个类别,既有支持也有反对医学职业的理由。在所有“支持”陈述中,70%属于日常工作生活中的个人经历(41.2%)和职业关系中的人际经历(28.8%)这两个排名靠前的类别。“反对”理由中排名靠前的类别是一般与工作相关的结构条件(32%),其次是社会威望和健康政策方面(21%)。支持医学职业的主要理由包括跨学科挑战、基础科学与人际关怀的结合、帮助受苦的人、有稳定工作的保障;反对的理由包括工作量大、时间压力、情绪压力、继续教育结构不佳、官僚作风增加、工作与生活失衡、收入低以及社会威望下降。这些陈述显示,根据性别、医学领域以及对再次选择医学职业的态度,差异不大;五分之一的年轻医生不会再次选择。
住院医师的主要抱怨是工作结构条件恶化,包括不利的工作与生活平衡。要使医学再次成为有吸引力的职业,需要在健康政策框架和社会回报方面进行可持续的变革。