McManus I C, Richards P, Winder B C, Sproston K A, Styles V
St Mary's Hospital Medical School, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London.
BMJ. 1995 Feb 25;310(6978):496-500. doi: 10.1136/bmj.310.6978.496.
To assess whether people from ethnic minority groups are less likely to be accepted at British medical schools, and to explore the mechanisms of disadvantage.
Prospective study of a national cohort of medical school applicants.
All 28 medical schools in the United Kingdom.
6901 subjects who had applied through the Universities' Central Council on Admissions in 1990 to study medicine.
Offers and acceptance at medical school by ethnic group.
Applicants from ethnic minority groups constituted 26.3% of those applying to medical school. They were less likely to be accepted, partly because they were less well qualified and applied later. Nevertheless, taking educational and some other predictors into account, applicants from ethnic minority groups were 1.46 times (95% confidence interval 1.19 to 1.74) less likely to be accepted. Having a European surname predicted acceptance better than ethnic origin itself, implying direct discrimination rather than disadvantage secondary to other possible differences between white and non-white applicants. Applicants from ethnic minority groups fared significantly less well in 12 of the 28 British medical schools. Analysis of the selection process suggests that medical schools make fewer offers to such applicants than to others with equivalent estimated A level grades.
People from ethnic minority groups applying to medical school are disadvantaged, principally because ethnic origin is assessed from a candidate's surname; the disadvantage has diminished since 1986. For subjects applying before A level the mechanism is that less credit is given to referees' estimates of A level grades. Selection would be fairer if (a) application forms were anonymous; (b) forms did not include estimates of A level grades; and (c) selection took place after A level results are known.
评估少数族裔人群被英国医学院录取的可能性是否较低,并探究造成劣势的机制。
对全国医学院申请者队列进行前瞻性研究。
英国所有28所医学院。
1990年通过大学招生中央委员会申请学习医学的6901名受试者。
按种族划分的医学院录取通知及录取情况。
少数族裔申请者占医学院申请者总数的26.3%。他们被录取的可能性较小,部分原因是他们的资质较差且申请较晚。然而,考虑到教育程度和其他一些预测因素,少数族裔申请者被录取的可能性要低1.46倍(95%置信区间为1.19至1.74)。拥有欧洲姓氏比种族出身本身更能预测录取情况,这意味着存在直接歧视,而非白人和非白人申请者之间其他可能差异导致的劣势。在英国28所医学院中的12所,少数族裔申请者的表现明显较差。对选拔过程的分析表明,医学院向此类申请者发出的录取通知比向具有同等预估A级成绩的其他申请者要少。
申请医学院的少数族裔人群处于劣势,主要原因是根据候选人的姓氏来评估种族出身;自1986年以来,这种劣势有所减轻。对于在A级考试之前申请的受试者,机制是对推荐人对A级成绩的评估给予的信任度较低。如果(a)申请表匿名;(b)表格不包括A级成绩的评估;(c)在知道A级考试成绩后进行选拔,那么选拔将会更公平。