Maiorova Tanja, Stevens Fred, van der Zee Jouke, Boode Beppie, Scherpbier Albert
Institute of Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, Maastricht University, The Netherlands.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2008 Dec 17;8:262. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-8-262.
Female medical students often prefer primary care specialties, while male students appear to be attracted to hospital specialties. Notwithstanding the steady feminisation of medicine, in many countries there are still difficulties in recruiting trainees for general practice. This seeming paradox raises the question on what specific role gender plays in a specialty choice. The authors looked at the (a) the role of gender in general practice specialty choice of Dutch medical students, (b) the decisive factors in career choice and relation of gender to these, and (c) differences in how male and female students are influenced by the GP clerkship.
A cohort of 206 final year medical students at the Maastricht University, the Netherlands were asked to complete a questionnaire focusing on career preferences before and after a 12-week general practice clerkship and at graduation, a couple of months later.
Gender was significantly related to willingness to become a GP in bivariate analysis. Adding variables in multivariate analysis made this effect disappear. While females expressed overall higher preference for general practice than males, after the GP clerkship likelihood of choosing general practice increased with 38% among male and 22% among female students. After graduation, interest in general practice had dropped, mainly among females. Attitudes predicting a GP career choice were: extrinsic career motivation before the clerkship, and the content of GP work (patient contacts, treatments) and motivation to work with chronic and palliative patients after the clerkship.
Gender 'as such' appeared not to be a distinctive predictor of specialty choice. It is students' attitudes towards GP work and preferred patient category that determine the career choice in general practice. However, more male students were positively influenced by the GP clerkship than female students. The motivating effect of the clerkship is not long lasting. Especially female graduates change their interest in favour of other specialties, which may explain why eventually few students choose general practice. It might be worthwhile to reinforce an initial preference for general practice by motivational guidance throughout the whole period of clerkships.
女医学生通常更倾向于基层医疗专业,而男学生似乎更青睐医院专科。尽管医学领域女性化趋势不断加剧,但在许多国家,招募全科医学培训生仍存在困难。这种看似矛盾的现象引发了一个问题,即性别在专业选择中具体扮演着什么角色。作者研究了(a)性别在荷兰医学生选择全科医学专业中的作用,(b)职业选择的决定性因素以及性别与这些因素的关系,(c)男女学生在全科医学实习中受到的影响的差异。
荷兰马斯特里赫特大学的206名最后一年医学生被要求在为期12周的全科医学实习前后以及几个月后的毕业时填写一份关于职业偏好的问卷。
在双变量分析中,性别与成为全科医生的意愿显著相关。在多变量分析中加入变量后,这种影响消失了。虽然女性总体上比男性对全科医学的偏好更高,但在全科医学实习后,选择全科医学的可能性在男学生中增加了38%,在女学生中增加了22%。毕业后,对全科医学的兴趣有所下降,主要是在女性中。预测选择全科医生职业的态度包括:实习前的外在职业动机,以及实习后的全科医学工作内容(与患者接触、治疗)和与慢性病及姑息治疗患者合作的动机。
性别本身似乎并不是专业选择的独特预测因素。是学生对全科医学工作的态度以及偏好的患者类别决定了全科医学的职业选择。然而,受到全科医学实习积极影响的男学生比女学生更多。实习的激励作用并不持久。尤其是女毕业生改变了她们的兴趣,转而青睐其他专业,这可能解释了为什么最终很少有学生选择全科医学。在整个实习期间通过激励指导来强化对全科医学的初始偏好可能是值得的。