Adams Simon, Ginther David Nathan, Neuls Evan, Hayes Paul
From the Department of General Surgery, University of Saskatchewan, Royal University Hospital, Saskatoon, SK.
Can J Surg. 2017 Aug;60(4):247-252. doi: 10.1503/cjs.004616.
We recently studied attrition in Canadian general surgical programs; however, there are no data on whether residents enrolled in other surgical residencies harbour the same intents as their general surgical peers. We sought to determine how many residents in surgical disciplines in Canada consider leaving their programs and why.
An anonymous survey was administered to all residents in 9 surgical disciplines in Canada. Significance of association was determined using the Pearson χ2 test. The Canadian Post-MD Education Registry (CAPER) website was used to calculate the response rate.
We received 523 responses (27.6% response rate). Of these respondents, 140 (26.8%) were either "somewhat" or "seriously" considering leaving their program. Residents wanting to pursue additional fellowship training and those aspiring to an academic career were significantly less likely to be considering changing specialties ( = 0.003 and = 0.005, respectively). Poor work-life balance and fear of unemployment/underemployment were the top reasons why residents would change specialty (55.5% and 40.8%, respectively), although the reasons cited were not significantly different between those considering changing and those who were not ( = 0.64). Residents who were considering changing programs were significantly less likely to enjoy their work and more likely to cite having already invested too much time to change as a reason for continuing ( < 0.001).
More than one-quarter of residents in surgical training programs in Canada harbour desires to abandon their surgical careers, primarily because of unsatisfactory work-life balance and limited employment prospects. Efforts to educate prospective residents about the reality of the surgical lifestyle and to optimize employment prospects may improve completion rates.
我们最近研究了加拿大普通外科住院医师培训项目中的人员流失情况;然而,对于参加其他外科住院医师培训项目的住院医师是否与普通外科同行有相同的意向,尚无相关数据。我们试图确定加拿大外科各学科中有多少住院医师考虑离开他们的培训项目以及原因。
对加拿大9个外科学科的所有住院医师进行了一项匿名调查。使用Pearson χ2检验确定关联的显著性。通过加拿大毕业后医学教育注册中心(CAPER)网站计算回复率。
我们收到了523份回复(回复率为27.6%)。在这些受访者中,140人(26.8%)“有点”或“非常”考虑离开他们的培训项目。想要接受额外专科培训的住院医师以及有志于从事学术职业的住院医师考虑更换专业的可能性显著较低(分别为P = 0.003和P = 0.005)。工作与生活平衡不佳以及对失业/就业不足的担忧是住院医师更换专业的首要原因(分别为55.5%和40.8%),尽管考虑更换专业的人与不考虑更换专业的人所提及的原因并无显著差异(P = 0.64)。考虑更换培训项目的住院医师享受工作的可能性显著较低,并且更有可能将已经投入了太多时间而难以改变作为继续留在原项目的一个理由(P < 0.001)。
加拿大外科培训项目中超过四分之一的住院医师希望放弃他们的外科职业生涯,主要原因是工作与生活平衡不理想以及就业前景有限。向前瞻性住院医师宣传外科生活方式的现实情况并优化就业前景的努力可能会提高培训完成率。