Cunningham Mara S, McCartney Justin O, Cathcart-Rake William F
University of Kansas School of Medicine-Salina, Salina, KS.
Kans J Med. 2022 Sep 21;15(3):311-318. doi: 10.17161/kjm.vol15.17939. eCollection 2022.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of the Summer Training Option in Rural Medicine (STORM) program and other elective experiences during the summer between the first and second pre-clerkship years of medical school on medical students' career intentions.
A retrospective voluntary and anonymous cohort study was conducted by distributing an email survey to the 211 second-year medical students at the University of Kansas School of Medicine (KUSM). The survey consisted of a variety of questions regarding their recent summer break elective experiences.
Eighty-nine students (42.2% response rate) completed the survey; 21 respondents participated in the STORM program. Important factors influencing the choice of an elective included, working one-on-one with an educator, hands-on experiences, and receiving academic credit. Sixty-seven respondents (75.3%) concluded that their experience met their expectations, 50 (56.2%) concluded that their experience helped solidify their career goals, while 20 (22.5%) concluded that their experience made them question their career goals. Eleven respondents (12.4%) wished they had participated in a different summer experience, and 16 respondents (18.0%) changed their career plans after their summer experience.
A break between first and second years of medical school allowed students to explore career options; such experiences may ignite a particular passion, solidify an already determined specialty choice, or dissuade a student from pursuing a particular career pathway. Medical school affirmation of the importance of significant, sustained, and student-chosen opportunities to work one-on-one with a mentor and engage in hands-on learning during the pre-clerkship years is crucial. The STORM program was one elective option that delivered on students' expectations.
本研究旨在调查农村医学暑期培训项目(STORM)以及医学院预科一、二年级之间暑期的其他选修经历对医学生职业意向的影响。
通过向堪萨斯大学医学院(KUSM)的211名二年级医学生发送电子邮件调查问卷,开展了一项回顾性自愿匿名队列研究。该调查包含了一系列关于他们近期暑期选修经历的问题。
89名学生(回复率42.2%)完成了调查;21名受访者参加了STORM项目。影响选修课选择的重要因素包括与教育工作者一对一合作、实践经验以及获得学术学分。67名受访者(75.3%)认为他们的经历符合预期,50名(56.2%)认为他们的经历有助于巩固职业目标,而20名(22.5%)认为他们的经历使他们对职业目标产生了质疑。11名受访者(12.4%)希望他们参加了不同的暑期经历,16名受访者(18.0%)在暑期经历后改变了职业规划。
医学院预科一、二年级之间的假期让学生能够探索职业选择;此类经历可能会激发某种特定的热情,巩固已确定的专业选择,或者使学生放弃追求某一特定职业道路。医学院认可在预科阶段有意义、持续且由学生自主选择的与导师一对一合作及参与实践学习机会的重要性至关重要。STORM项目是符合学生期望的一个选修选项。