Woolley Torres, Sen Gupta Tarun, Bellei Maria
James Cook University College of Medicine and Dentistry, Townsville, Queensland, Australia.
Rural Remote Health. 2017 Jan-Mar;17(1):3992. doi: 10.22605/rrh3992. Epub 2017 Feb 13.
This article describes factors predicting James Cook University (JCU) medical graduates undertaking at least 1 year of remote practice. The cross-sectional design involved point-in-time (2015) analysis of the JCU medical school's ongoing longitudinal graduate tracking database. Participants were the first seven cohorts of graduates from the JCU medical school who had completed at least their postgraduate year (PGY) 4 in Australia (=529); that is, PGY 4 to PGY 10 graduates.
Multiple logistic regression and Classification and Regression Tree (CART) analysis of medical graduate application data (age, gender, hometown, interview score, ethnicity), undergraduate data (scholarships awarded, clinical school location) and postgraduation data (internship location, specialty training) was performed. Analysis identified independent predictors of having practised for at least 1 year in a 'remote' Australian town (Australian Standard Geographic Classification Remoteness Area 4-5).
Forty-seven (9%) of JCU Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery graduates in the first seven cohorts had practised for at least 1 year in a remote location between PGY 4 and 10. Practice in a 'remote' town was predicted by undertaking rural generalist training (<0.001; prevalence odds ratio (POR)=17.0), being awarded an 'above average' interview score at medical school selection (=0.006; POR=5.1), attending the Darwin clinical school in years 5-6 (=0.005; POR=4.7), being female (=0.016, POR=3.6) and undertaking an outer-regional or remotely based internship (=0.006; POR=3.5). CART analysis identified Indigenous graduates as another key subgroup of remote practice graduates.
This study provides the first Australian evidence that likelihood of remote medical practice is enhanced by investment in a 'remote pipeline' - medical education via clinical schools and internships in rural/remote locations, with a later option of a rural generalist pathway. The proportion of medical graduates working in remote practice may also be increased by preferentially selecting Indigenous Australian applicants and applicants who score highly for communication, teamwork, self-reliance and motivation for rural and remote practice.
本文描述了预测詹姆斯库克大学(JCU)医学毕业生进行至少1年远程医疗实践的因素。横断面设计涉及对JCU医学院正在进行的纵向毕业生跟踪数据库进行时间点(2015年)分析。参与者是JCU医学院的前七批毕业生,他们在澳大利亚至少完成了研究生四年级(PGY)(=529人);即PGY 4至PGY 10的毕业生。
对医学毕业生申请数据(年龄、性别、家乡、面试分数、种族)、本科数据(获得的奖学金、临床学校地点)和毕业后数据(实习地点、专业培训)进行多元逻辑回归和分类与回归树(CART)分析。分析确定了在澳大利亚偏远城镇(澳大利亚标准地理分类偏远地区4 - 5)至少执业1年的独立预测因素。
前七批JCU医学学士和外科学士毕业生中有47人(9%)在PGY 4至10期间在偏远地区至少执业1年。在偏远城镇执业的预测因素包括接受农村全科医生培训(<0.001;患病率比值比(POR)=17.0)、在医学院选拔中获得“高于平均水平”的面试分数(=0.006;POR = 5.1)、在5 - 6年级就读达尔文临床学校(=0.005;POR = 4.7)、女性(=0.016,POR = 3.6)以及进行外区域或偏远地区实习(=0.006;POR = 3.5)。CART分析确定原住民毕业生是远程医疗实践毕业生的另一个关键亚组。
本研究提供了澳大利亚首个证据,即通过投资“偏远渠道”——通过农村/偏远地区的临床学校和实习进行医学教育,并随后选择农村全科医生途径,可提高远程医疗实践的可能性。通过优先选择澳大利亚原住民申请人以及在沟通、团队合作、自立和农村及偏远地区医疗实践动机方面得分高的申请人,也可能增加在偏远地区执业的医学毕业生比例。