Institute of Education for Medical and Dental Sciences, School of Medicine, Medical Sciences & Nutrition, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
Medical Statistics Team, School of Medicine, Medical Sciences & Nutrition, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
BMC Med Educ. 2018 Dec 20;18(1):314. doi: 10.1186/s12909-018-1414-9.
The UK faces geographical variation in the recruitment of doctors. Understanding where medical graduates choose to go for training is important because doctors are more likely to consider practicing in areas where they completed postgraduate training. The wider literature also suggests that there is a relationship between origin and background, and where doctors wish to train/work. Thus, the purpose of this paper is to investigate the geographical mobility of UK medical graduates from different socio-economic groups in terms of where they wish to spend their first years of postgraduate training.
This was an observational study of Foundation Programme (FP) doctors who graduated from 33 UK medical schools between 2012 and 2014. Data was accessed via the UK medical education database (UKMED: https://www.ukmed.ac.uk/ ). Chi-square tests were used to examine the relationships between doctor's sociodemographic characteristics and the dependent variable, average driving time from parental home to foundation school/region. Generalised Linear Mixed Models (GLMM) were used to estimate the effects of those factors in combination against the outcome measure.
The majority of doctors prefer to train at foundation schools that are reasonably close to the family home. Those who attended state-funded schools, from non-white ethnic groups and/or from lower socio-economic groups were significantly more likely to choose foundation schools nearer their parental home. Doctors from disadvantaged backgrounds (as determined by entitlement to free school meals, OR = 1.29, p = 0.003 and no parental degree, OR = 1.34, p < 0.001) were associated with higher odds of selecting a foundation schools that were closer to parental home.
The data suggests that recruiting medical students from lower socioeconomic groups and those who originate from under-recruiting areas may be at least part of the solution to filling training posts in these areas. This has obvious implications for the widening access agenda, and equitable distribution of health services.
英国在医生招聘方面存在地域差异。了解医学毕业生选择去哪里接受培训非常重要,因为医生更有可能考虑在他们完成研究生培训的地区行医。更广泛的文献还表明,医生的出身和背景与其希望接受培训/工作的地点之间存在关系。因此,本文旨在调查来自不同社会经济群体的英国医学毕业生在其希望接受研究生培训的第一年内的地域流动性。
这是一项对 2012 年至 2014 年间从英国 33 所医学院毕业的基础课程医生(Foundation Programme,FP)的观察性研究。通过英国医学教育数据库(UKMED:https://www.ukmed.ac.uk/)获取数据。采用卡方检验分析医生的社会人口统计学特征与因变量(从父母家到基础学校/地区的平均驾车时间)之间的关系。采用广义线性混合模型(GLMM)结合对这些因素进行组合对结果进行估计。
大多数医生更喜欢在离家较近的基础学校接受培训。那些就读于公立学校、来自非白人群体和/或来自较低社会经济群体的医生,更有可能选择离家较近的基础学校。背景较差的医生(根据是否有资格享受免费校餐来确定,OR=1.29,p=0.003,以及父母没有学位,OR=1.34,p<0.001),选择离家较近的基础学校的几率更高。
数据表明,从较低社会经济群体和来自低招聘地区的医学生中招募可能是填补这些地区培训职位的解决方案的一部分。这对扩大招生计划和公平分配医疗服务具有明显的意义。