Institute of General Practice and Public Health, College of Health Care Professions, Lorenz-Boehler-street 13, Bolzano, 39100, Italy.
Institute of General Practice, Medical University Innsbruck, Christoph-Probst-square 1, Innsbruck, 6020, Austria.
BMC Med Educ. 2024 Mar 15;24(1):294. doi: 10.1186/s12909-024-05205-8.
The global primary healthcare workforce is declining, leading to a shortage of general practitioners. Although various educational models aim to increase interest in general practice, effective interventions are limited. The reasons for this low appeal among medical graduates remain unclear.
This cross-sectional study surveyed medical students' and residents' attitudes towards general practice in Tyrol, Austria. The online questionnaire addressed professional values, general practice-related issues, personal professional intentions, and demographics. Data analysis employed chi-square tests and multivariate logistic regression to explore predictors of interest in general practice.
The study included 528 students and 103 residents. Key values identified were stable positions, assured income, and work-family reconciliation. General practice was recognised for long-term patient relationships and patient contact, with students attributing more positive work-environmental characteristics and higher reputation to it than residents. Few participants (students: 3.2%, residents: 11.7%) had opted for general practice; about half were considering it as career option. Reasons not to choose general practice were preferences for other specialties, intrinsic characteristics of general practice, workload, insufficient time for the patients, financial pressures, low reputation, and perceived mediocre training quality. Predictors of interest in general practice included perception of independent decision-making, importance of work-family balance (students), better practical experiences in general practice during medical school (students and residents), younger age, and perceiving general practice as offering a promising future (residents). Both groups felt underprepared by medical school and/or general practice training for general practice roles. The attractiveness of specialist medicine over general practice was related to clearer content boundaries, better career opportunities, and higher incomes.
According to these results, measures to improve attractiveness of general practice should focus on (i) high-quality undergraduate education including practical experiences, and (ii) on ensuring professional autonomy, work-family reconciliation, and job stability. Efforts to encourage more graduates to pursue this essential healthcare sector are crucial for strengthening primary healthcare and public health services.
The study has not been registered as it did not include a direct medical intervention on human participants.
全球初级保健劳动力正在减少,导致全科医生短缺。尽管各种教育模式旨在提高对全科医学的兴趣,但有效的干预措施有限。造成这种对医学毕业生吸引力低的原因尚不清楚。
本横断面研究调查了奥地利蒂罗尔州医学生和住院医师对全科医学的态度。在线问卷涉及专业价值观、与全科医学相关的问题、个人专业意向和人口统计学。数据分析采用卡方检验和多变量逻辑回归来探讨对全科医学感兴趣的预测因素。
研究共纳入 528 名学生和 103 名住院医师。确定的关键价值观是稳定的职位、有保障的收入和工作与家庭的协调。全科医学被认为是建立长期医患关系和接触患者的途径,与住院医师相比,学生对其工作环境特征的评价更为积极,声誉更高。很少有参与者(学生:3.2%,住院医师:11.7%)选择全科医学;约有一半人将其视为职业选择。不选择全科医学的原因是对其他专业的偏好、全科医学的内在特征、工作量、患者时间不足、经济压力、声誉低以及认为培训质量一般。对全科医学感兴趣的预测因素包括独立决策的感知、工作与家庭平衡的重要性(学生)、在医学院期间获得更好的全科医学实践经验(学生和住院医师)、年龄较小以及认为全科医学提供有前途的未来(住院医师)。这两个群体都认为医学院和/或全科医学培训对全科医学角色的准备不足。专科医学比全科医学更具吸引力,原因是专科医学的内容边界更清晰、职业机会更好、收入更高。
根据这些结果,提高全科医学吸引力的措施应侧重于(i)包括实践经验在内的高质量本科教育,以及(ii)确保专业自主权、工作与家庭的协调和工作稳定性。鼓励更多毕业生从事这一重要医疗保健领域的工作对于加强初级保健和公共卫生服务至关重要。
该研究未注册,因为它没有对人类参与者进行直接的医疗干预。