Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Med Educ. 2010 Jun;44(6):577-86. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2010.03630.x.
CONTEXT Since the early 1990s, medical school tuition fees have increased substantially in all regions of Canada except Quebec. This provides a natural opportunity to examine the effect of tuition fee increases on medical student demographics, indebtedness and financial stress. METHODS We conducted a national survey of medical students in 2007. We compared results for Quebec students with results for students studying in other parts of the country. We also compared results for 2007 medical students with results for medical students who had completed a similar survey in 2001 and with data for the general population. For the 2007 cohort, we also identified predictors of anticipated debt at the time of medical school graduation. RESULTS A total of 7795 students responded to either the 2001 (n = 3871) or 2007 (n = 3924) survey. Median anticipated debt increased from $40 000 in 2001 to $71 000 in 2007 (Canadian dollars). Medical students in Quebec were more likely to have grown up in a lower-income neighbourhood (odds ratio [OR] = 1.22, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.03-1.44), were less likely to report significant financial stress (OR = 0.43, 95% CI 0.37-0.50) and reported a lower median anticipated debt than medical students in the rest of Canada ($30 000 versus $90 000; p < 0.001). Across Canada, factors associated with increased debt at the time of graduation were higher tuition fees, lower parental income, non-Chinese ethnicity, higher debt at entry to medical school, smaller non-repayable financial grants, longer pre-medical education and higher non-tuition expenses. CONCLUSIONS Quebec medical students differ from their counterparts in the rest of Canada in several notable ways. In particular, medical student debt has increased more and is greater in the rest of Canada than in Quebec. Our findings have implications for doctor human resources planning in Canada.
自 20 世纪 90 年代初以来,加拿大除魁北克以外的所有地区的医学院学费都大幅上涨。这为研究学费上涨对医学生群体、债务和经济压力的影响提供了一个自然的机会。
我们于 2007 年对全国医学生进行了一项调查。我们将魁北克学生的结果与其他地区学生的结果进行了比较。我们还将 2007 年医学生的结果与 2001 年完成类似调查的医学生的结果以及一般人群的数据进行了比较。对于 2007 年的医学生群体,我们还确定了医学生毕业时预期债务的预测因素。
共有 7795 名学生(2001 年 3871 名,2007 年 3924 名)对调查做出了回应。预期债务中位数从 2001 年的 40000 加元增加到 2007 年的 71000 加元。魁北克的医学生更有可能成长在一个低收入社区(优势比 [OR] = 1.22,95%置信区间 [CI] 1.03-1.44),不太可能报告严重的经济压力(OR = 0.43,95%CI 0.37-0.50),并报告比加拿大其他地区的医学生低的中位数预期债务(30000 加元与 90000 加元;p < 0.001)。在加拿大各地,与毕业时债务增加相关的因素包括更高的学费、父母收入较低、非华裔族裔、入学时的债务较高、较小的不可偿还财政赠款、更长的预科医学教育和更高的非学费支出。
魁北克的医学生与加拿大其他地区的医学生有几个显著的不同。特别是,加拿大其他地区的医学生债务增加更多,债务负担也更重。我们的研究结果对加拿大医生人力资源规划有一定的启示。