University Institute for Primary Care (IuMFE), Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Rue Michel-Servet 1, 1211, Genève 4, Switzerland.
Unit of Development and Research in Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
BMC Med Educ. 2022 Jan 11;22(1):30. doi: 10.1186/s12909-021-03091-y.
Medical schools can contribute to the insufficient primary care physician workforce by influencing students' career preferences. Primary care career choice evolves between matriculation and graduation and is influenced by several individual and contextual factors. This study explored the longitudinal dynamics of primary care career intentions and the association of students' motives for becoming doctors with these intentions in a cohort of undergraduate medical students followed over a four-year period.
The sample consisted of medical students from two classes recruited into a cohort study during their first academic year, and who completed a yearly survey over a four-year period from their third (end of pre-clinical curriculum) to their sixth (before graduation) academic year. Main outcome measures were students' motives for becoming doctors (ten motives rated on a 6-point scale) and career intentions (categorized into primary care, non-primary care, and undecided). Population-level flows of career intentions were investigated descriptively. Changes in the rating of motives over time were analyzed using Wilcoxon tests. Two generalized linear mixed models were used to estimate which motives were associated with primary care career intentions.
The sample included 217 students (60% females). Career intentions mainly evolved during clinical training, with smaller changes at the end of pre-clinical training. The proportion of students intending to practice primary care increased over time from 12.8% (year 3) to 24% (year 6). Caring for patients was the most highly rated motive for becoming a doctor. The importance of the motives cure diseases, saving lives, and vocation decreased over time. Primary care career intentions were positively associated with the motives altruism and private practice, and negatively associated with the motives prestige, academic interest and cure diseases.
Our study indicates that career intentions are not fixed and change mainly during clinical training, supporting the influence of clinical experiences on career-related choices. The impact of students' motives on primary care career choice suggests strategies to increase the attractivity of this career, such as reinforcing students' altruistic values and increasing the academic recognition of primary care.
医学院校可以通过影响学生的职业偏好来为初级保健医生人数不足做出贡献。选择初级保健职业的过程在入学和毕业之间发展,并受到几个个人和环境因素的影响。本研究在一个为期四年的队列研究中,对本科生医学生进行了纵向研究,探讨了初级保健职业意向的动态变化,以及学生成为医生的动机与这些意向的关联。
该样本由两个班级的医学生组成,在他们的第一学年被招募到一个队列研究中,并在他们的第三(临床前课程结束)到第六(毕业前)学年完成了为期四年的年度调查。主要的结局测量指标是学生成为医生的动机(十个动机,在 6 分制上评分)和职业意向(分为初级保健、非初级保健和未决定)。描述性地研究了职业意向的人口流动。使用 Wilcoxon 检验分析了随时间推移对动机的评分变化。使用两个广义线性混合模型来估计哪些动机与初级保健职业意向相关。
该样本包括 217 名学生(60%为女性)。职业意向主要在临床培训期间演变,在临床前培训结束时变化较小。打算从事初级保健工作的学生比例随着时间的推移从第 3 年的 12.8%增加到第 6 年的 24%。照顾病人是成为医生的首要动机。成为医生的动机中治病、拯救生命和职业的重要性随时间的推移而降低。初级保健职业意向与利他主义和私人执业的动机呈正相关,与威望、学术兴趣和治病的动机呈负相关。
我们的研究表明,职业意向不是固定的,主要在临床培训期间发生变化,这支持了临床经验对职业相关选择的影响。学生动机对初级保健职业选择的影响表明,增加该职业吸引力的策略,如加强学生的利他主义价值观和提高初级保健的学术认可度。