Medical graduates becoming rural doctors: rural background versus extended rural placement

Objectives: To determine whether recruitment of rural students and uptake of extended rural placements are associated with students’ expressed intentions to undertake rural internships and students’ acceptance of rural internships after finishing medical school, and to compare any associations. Desi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical journal of Australia 2013-12, Vol.199 (11), p.779-782
Hauptverfasser: Clark, Tyler R, Freedman, Saul B, Croft, Amanda J, Dalton, Hazel E, Luscombe, Georgina M, Brown, Anthony M, Tiller, David J, Frommer, Michael S
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container_end_page 782
container_issue 11
container_start_page 779
container_title Medical journal of Australia
container_volume 199
creator Clark, Tyler R
Freedman, Saul B
Croft, Amanda J
Dalton, Hazel E
Luscombe, Georgina M
Brown, Anthony M
Tiller, David J
Frommer, Michael S
description Objectives: To determine whether recruitment of rural students and uptake of extended rural placements are associated with students’ expressed intentions to undertake rural internships and students’ acceptance of rural internships after finishing medical school, and to compare any associations. Design, setting and participants: Longitudinal study of three successive cohorts (commencing 2005, 2006, 2007) of medical students in the Sydney Medical Program (SMP), University of Sydney, New South Wales, using responses to self‐administered questionnaires upon entry to and exit from the Sydney Medical School and data recorded in rolls. Main outcome measures: Students’ expressed intentions to undertake rural internships, and their acceptance of rural internships after finishing medical school. Results: Data from 448 students were included. The proportion of students preferring a rural career dropped from 20.7% (79/382) to 12.5% (54/433) between entry into and exit from the SMP. A total of 98 students took extended rural placements. Ultimately, 8.1% (35/434) accepted a rural internship, although 14.5% (60/415) had indicated a first preference for a rural post. Students who had undertaken an extended rural placement were more than three times as likely as those with rural backgrounds to express a first preference for a rural internship (23.9% v 7.7%; χ2 = 7.04; P = 0.008) and more than twice as likely to accept a rural internship (21.3% v 9.9%; χ2 = 3.85; P = 0.05). Conclusion: For the three cohorts studied, rural clinical training through extended placements in rural clinical schools had a stronger association than rural background with a preference for, and acceptance of, rural internship.
doi_str_mv 10.5694/mja13.10036
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Design, setting and participants: Longitudinal study of three successive cohorts (commencing 2005, 2006, 2007) of medical students in the Sydney Medical Program (SMP), University of Sydney, New South Wales, using responses to self‐administered questionnaires upon entry to and exit from the Sydney Medical School and data recorded in rolls. Main outcome measures: Students’ expressed intentions to undertake rural internships, and their acceptance of rural internships after finishing medical school. Results: Data from 448 students were included. The proportion of students preferring a rural career dropped from 20.7% (79/382) to 12.5% (54/433) between entry into and exit from the SMP. A total of 98 students took extended rural placements. Ultimately, 8.1% (35/434) accepted a rural internship, although 14.5% (60/415) had indicated a first preference for a rural post. Students who had undertaken an extended rural placement were more than three times as likely as those with rural backgrounds to express a first preference for a rural internship (23.9% v 7.7%; χ2 = 7.04; P = 0.008) and more than twice as likely to accept a rural internship (21.3% v 9.9%; χ2 = 3.85; P = 0.05). 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Design, setting and participants: Longitudinal study of three successive cohorts (commencing 2005, 2006, 2007) of medical students in the Sydney Medical Program (SMP), University of Sydney, New South Wales, using responses to self‐administered questionnaires upon entry to and exit from the Sydney Medical School and data recorded in rolls. Main outcome measures: Students’ expressed intentions to undertake rural internships, and their acceptance of rural internships after finishing medical school. Results: Data from 448 students were included. The proportion of students preferring a rural career dropped from 20.7% (79/382) to 12.5% (54/433) between entry into and exit from the SMP. A total of 98 students took extended rural placements. Ultimately, 8.1% (35/434) accepted a rural internship, although 14.5% (60/415) had indicated a first preference for a rural post. Students who had undertaken an extended rural placement were more than three times as likely as those with rural backgrounds to express a first preference for a rural internship (23.9% v 7.7%; χ2 = 7.04; P = 0.008) and more than twice as likely to accept a rural internship (21.3% v 9.9%; χ2 = 3.85; P = 0.05). 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subjects Career Choice
Education, Medical, Undergraduate - methods
Education, Medical, Undergraduate - statistics & numerical data
Environment and public health
Humans
Intention
Internship and Residency - statistics & numerical data
Longitudinal Studies
Medically Underserved Area
New South Wales
Rural Health Services
Rural Population
School Admission Criteria
Students, Medical - psychology
Surveys and Questionnaires
Workforce
title Medical graduates becoming rural doctors: rural background versus extended rural placement
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