University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, CT, USA.
Department of Family Medicine, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, CT, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2022 Mar 17;22(1):187. doi: 10.1186/s12909-022-03244-7.
A high proportion of medical school graduates pursue specialties different from those declared at matriculation. While these choices influence the career paths, satisfaction, and potential regret students will experience, they also impact the supply and demand ratio of the shorthanded physician workforce across many specialties. In this study, we investigate how the choice of medical specialty and the factors motivating those choices change between the beginning and end of medical school training.
A questionnaire was administered annually from 2017 to 2020 to a cohort of medical students at the University of Connecticut to determine longitudinal preferences regarding residency choice, motivational factors influencing residency choice, future career path, and demographic information.
The questionnaire respondent totals were as follows: n = 76 (Year 1), n = 54 (Year 2), n = 31 (Year 3), and n = 65 (Year 4). Amongst newly matriculated students, 25.0% were interested in primary care, which increased ~ 1.4-fold to 35.4% in the final year of medical school. In contrast, 38.2% of matriculated students expressed interest in surgical specialties, which decreased ~ 2.5-fold to 15.4% in the final year. Specialty choices in the final year that exhibited the largest absolute change from matriculation were orthopedic surgery (- 9.9%), family medicine (+ 8.1%), radiology (+ 7.9%), general surgery (- 7.2%), and anesthesiology (+ 6.2%). Newly matriculated students interested in primary care demonstrated no differences in their ranking of motivational factors compared to students interested in surgery, but many of these factors significantly deviated between the two career paths in the final year. Specifically, students interested in surgical specialties were more motivated by the rewards of salary and prestige compared to primary care students, who more highly ranked match confidence and family/location factors.
We identified how residency choices change from the beginning to the end of medical school, how certain motivational factors change with time, how these results diverge between primary care and surgery specialty choice, and propose a new theory based on risk-reward balance regarding residency choice. Our study promotes awareness of student preferences and may help guide school curricula in developing more student-tailored training approaches. This could foster positive long-term changes regarding career satisfaction and the physician workforce.
相当比例的医学院毕业生从事的专业与入学时宣称的专业不同。这些选择不仅影响着学生未来的职业道路、满足感和潜在的遗憾,还影响着许多专业领域短缺医生劳动力的供需比例。在这项研究中,我们调查了医学生在医学专业选择以及影响这些选择的因素方面,从入学到毕业期间的变化情况。
我们向康涅狄格大学的一个医学生队列每年(2017 年至 2020 年)发放问卷,以确定他们在住院医师选择、影响住院医师选择的动机因素、未来职业道路和人口统计信息方面的纵向偏好。
问卷的应答总数如下:n=76(第 1 年)、n=54(第 2 年)、n=31(第 3 年)和 n=65(第 4 年)。在新入学的学生中,25.0%对初级保健感兴趣,这一比例在医学院的最后一年增加了约 1.4 倍,达到 35.4%。相比之下,38.2%的入学学生对外科专业感兴趣,这一比例在最后一年下降了约 2.5 倍,降至 15.4%。从入学到毕业,专业选择变化最大的是骨科(-9.9%)、家庭医学(+8.1%)、放射科(+7.9%)、普通外科(-7.2%)和麻醉科(+6.2%)。对初级保健感兴趣的新入学学生在动机因素的排名上与对手术感兴趣的学生没有差异,但在最后一年,许多因素在这两条职业道路之间发生了显著变化。具体来说,对外科专业感兴趣的学生更看重薪酬和威望方面的回报,而对初级保健学生来说,他们更看重匹配信心和家庭/地点因素。
我们确定了从入学到毕业期间住院医师选择的变化情况,以及某些动机因素随时间的变化情况,这些结果在初级保健和外科专业选择之间存在差异,并提出了一个基于风险回报平衡的住院医师选择的新理论。我们的研究提高了人们对学生偏好的认识,并可能有助于指导学校课程制定更符合学生需求的培训方法。这可能会对职业满意度和医生劳动力产生积极的长期影响。