Grace Matthew K
Hamilton College, Department of Sociology, 198 College Hill Rd., Clinton, NY 13323, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2017 Jul;184:84-98. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.05.004. Epub 2017 May 4.
Although students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds are more likely to depart from the medical education pipeline, little is known about how premedical students' social origins influence the adversities they face, the resources they possess, or the internal struggles they confront in deciding whether or not to pursue a career in medicine. Using original data collected from premedical students at a flagship state university in the Midwest (N = 364), this study explores how subjective social status shapes students' reservations about medical school attendance and their perceptions of external pressure to pursue a career in medicine. Status-based discrepancies in financial strains, social capital, and interpersonal stressors-and the degree to which variation across these measures mediates status differences in medical school outlook-are also explored. Net of objective measures of social class, results suggest that doubts about attending medical school and feeling that not attending medical school will let down one's community are more prevalent among premeds who identify as lower status. These group differences are explained-at least in part-by lower status premedical students' perceptions of financial hardships, more limited reserves of social capital, and more frequent encounters with class-based discrimination and with educators who discourage their career aspirations.
尽管来自社会经济背景较低的学生更有可能中断医学教育进程,但对于医学预科学生的社会出身如何影响他们所面临的困境、所拥有的资源,或者他们在决定是否从事医学职业时所面临的内心挣扎,人们知之甚少。本研究利用从美国中西部一所一流州立大学的医学预科学生那里收集的原始数据(N = 364),探讨主观社会地位如何塑造学生对就读医学院的保留态度以及他们对从事医学职业的外部压力的认知。还探讨了基于地位的经济压力、社会资本和人际压力源差异,以及这些指标的差异在多大程度上调节了医学院前景方面的地位差异。排除社会阶层的客观衡量指标后,结果表明,在自认为地位较低的医学预科学生中,对就读医学院的疑虑以及觉得不读医学院会让自己的社区失望的情况更为普遍。这些群体差异至少部分可以由地位较低的医学预科学生对经济困难的认知、社会资本储备较为有限,以及更频繁地遭遇基于阶层的歧视和遇到阻碍其职业抱负的教育工作者来解释。