Scanlan Gillian Marion, Cleland Jennifer, Johnston Peter, Walker Kim, Krucien Nicolas, Skåtun Diane
Centre for Healthcare Education Research and Innovation (CHERI), Institute of Education for Medical and Dental Sciences, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nutrition, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
NHS Education for Scotland, Scotland Deanery, Aberdeen, UK.
BMJ Open. 2018 Mar 12;8(3):e019911. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-019911.
Multiple personal and work-related factors influence medical trainees' career decision-making. The relative value of these diverse factors is under-researched, yet this intelligence is crucially important for informing medical workforce planning and retention and recruitment policies. Our aim was to investigate the relative value of UK doctors' preferences for different training post characteristics during the time period when they either apply for specialty or core training or take time out.
We developed a discrete choice experiment (DCE) specifically for this population. The DCE was distributed to all Foundation Programme Year 2 (F2) doctors across Scotland as part of the National Career Destination Survey in June 2016. The main outcome measure was the monetary value of training post characteristics, based on willingness to forgo additional potential income and willingness to accept extra income for a change in each job characteristic calculated from regression coefficients.
677/798 F2 doctors provided usable DCE responses. Location was the most influential characteristic of a training position, followed closely by supportive culture and then working conditions. F2 doctors would need to be compensated by an additional 45.75% above potential earnings to move from a post in a desirable location to one in an undesirable location. Doctors who applied for a training post placed less value on supportive culture and excellent working conditions than those who did not apply. Male F2s valued location and a supportive culture less than female F2s.
This is the first study focusing on the career decision-making of UK doctors at a critical careers decision-making point. Both location and specific job-related attributes are highly valued by F2 doctors when deciding their future. This intelligence can inform workforce policy to focus their efforts in terms of making training posts attractive to this group of doctors to enhance recruitment and retention.
多种个人因素和与工作相关的因素会影响医学实习生的职业决策。这些不同因素的相对价值研究不足,但这些信息对于指导医疗劳动力规划以及留用和招聘政策至关重要。我们的目的是调查在英国医生申请专科培训或核心培训或暂停工作期间,他们对不同培训岗位特征的偏好的相对价值。
我们专门为这一人群开展了一项离散选择实验(DCE)。作为2016年6月全国职业目的地调查的一部分,该DCE被分发给了苏格兰所有二年级基础培训项目(F2)的医生。主要结果指标是培训岗位特征的货币价值,该价值基于放弃额外潜在收入的意愿以及根据回归系数计算得出的因每项工作特征变化而接受额外收入的意愿。
677/798名F2医生提供了可用的DCE回复。工作地点是培训岗位最具影响力的特征,紧随其后的是支持性文化,然后是工作条件。F2医生若要从理想地点的岗位调至不理想地点的岗位,需要在潜在收入基础上额外获得45.75%的补偿。申请培训岗位的医生对支持性文化和良好工作条件的重视程度低于未申请的医生。男性F2医生对工作地点和支持性文化的重视程度低于女性F2医生。
这是第一项聚焦于英国医生在关键职业决策点的职业决策的研究。在决定未来时,F2医生高度重视工作地点和与工作相关的特定属性。这些信息可为劳动力政策提供参考,使其在努力使培训岗位对这群医生具有吸引力以提高招聘率和留用率方面有的放矢。