| Literature DB >> 29587722 |
Sari Mullola1,2, Christian Hakulinen3, Justin Presseau4,5, David Gimeno Ruiz de Porras6, Markus Jokela3, Taina Hintsa3, Marko Elovainio3,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Personality influences an individual's adaptation to a specific job or organization. Little is known about personality trait differences between medical career and specialty choices after graduating from medical school when actually practicing different medical specialties. Moreover, whether personality traits contribute to important career choices such as choosing to work in the private or public sector or with clinical patient contact, as well as change of specialty, have remained largely unexplored. In a nationally representative sample of Finnish physicians (N = 2837) we examined how personality traits are associated with medical career choices after graduating from medical school, in terms of employment sector, patient contact, medical specialty and change of specialty.Entities:
Keywords: Career counseling; Medical career; Medical education; Medical specialty; Person-job fit; Personality traits
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587722 PMCID: PMC5870817 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-018-1155-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Basic characteristics of 2837 Finnish physicians, by gender and specialty
| Women ( | Men ( | Total ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristics | Number | Percent | Number | Percent |
| Number | Percent |
| Gender | |||||||
| Women | 1.838 | 65 | 1.838 | 65 | |||
| Men | 999 | 35 | 999 | 35 | |||
| Age (M ± SD) | 47.94 ± 10.63 | 52.02 ± 11.72 | < 0.001 | 49.4 ± 11.19 | |||
| Employment sector | < 0.001 | ||||||
| Public | 1393 | 67.59 | 668 | 32.41 | 2.061 | 73 | |
| Private | 445 | 57.35 | 331 | 42.65 | 776 | 27 | |
| Medical specialty | < 0.001 | ||||||
| Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine | 120 | 64.17 | 67 | 35.83 | 187 | 6.6 | |
| Surgery | 80 | 34.93 | 149 | 65.07 | 229 | 8.1 | |
| Pediatrics | 124 | 75.61 | 40 | 24.39 | 164 | 5.8 | |
| Obstetrics and Gynecology | 155 | 83.33 | 31 | 16.67 | 186 | 6.6 | |
| Psychiatry | 231 | 75.49 | 75 | 24.51 | 306 | 10.8 | |
| Radiology | 55 | 52.88 | 49 | 47.12 | 104 | 3.6 | |
| Internal Medicine and Oncology | 91 | 63.64 | 52 | 36.36 | 143 | 5.0 | |
| Ophthalmology and Otorhinolaryngology | 68 | 51.91 | 63 | 48.09 | 131 | 4.6 | |
| Other specialties of Internal Medicine | 270 | 62.21 | 164 | 37.79 | 434 | 15.3 | |
| Occupational Health | 178 | 65.68 | 93 | 34.32 | 271 | 9.5 | |
| General Practice | 403 | 71.84 | 158 | 28.16 | 561 | 19.8 | |
| Hospital Service Specialties | 63 | 52.07 | 58 | 47.93 | 121 | 4.3 | |
| Clinical Patient Contact (hours per week; M ± SD) | 18.74 ± 9.70 | 18.36 ± 11.14 | 0.36 | 18.61 ± 10.23 | |||
| No clinical patient contact | 111 | 54.15 | 94 | 45.85 | 205 | 7.2 | |
| 1–12 h per week | 359 | 61.16 | 228 | 38.84 | 587 | 20.7 | |
| 13–26 h per week | 957 | 69.50 | 420 | 30.50 | 1.377 | 48.5 | |
| 27 h per week or more | 411 | 61.53 | 257 | 38.47 | 668 | 23.6 | |
| Personality trait (M ± SD; range 1–5) | |||||||
| Extraversion | 3.37 ± 0.90 | 3.16 ± 0.87 | < 0.001 | 3.30 ± .89 | |||
| Conscientiousness | 3.83 ± 0.75 | 3.62 ± 0.72 | < 0.001 | 3.76 ± .75 | |||
| Openness to Experience | 3.18 ± 0.74 | 3.30 ± 0.74 | < 0.001 | 3.22 ± .75 | |||
| Agreeableness | 3.40 ± 0.68 | 3.39 ± 0.67 | 0.83 | 3.39 ± .68 | |||
| Neuroticism | 2.94 ± 0.84 | 2.62 ± 0.76 | < 0.001 | 2.83 ± .82 | |||
a Categorical variables were compared by chi square tests and continuous variables were compared by two-sample t-tests
Fig. 1Finnish physicians’ (N = 2837) personality traits by specialty and gender. Units are standardized regression coefficients (β) and 95% confidence intervals. Analyses are adjusted for age, employment sector (private vs. public) and amount of clinical patient contact (hours per week). Specialty categories are: 1. Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine; 2. Surgery; 3. Pediatrics; 4. Obstetrics and Gynecology; 5. Psychiatry; 6. Radiology; 7. Internal Medicine and Oncology; 8. Ophthalmology and Otorhinolaryngology; 9. Other specialties of Internal Medicine; 10. Occupational Health; 11. General Practice; and 12. Hospital Service Specialties
Associations of personality traits with employment sector a, clinical patient work b, and medical specialty c among 2837 Finnish physicians and with change of specialty damong 986 Finnish physicians
| Big 5 traits | Extraversion | Conscien-tiousness | Openness to Experience | Agreeableness | Neuroticism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Career variable | β (95% CI) | β (95% CI) | β (95% CI) | β (95% CI) | β (95% CI) |
| Employment sectora | |||||
| Public ( | − 0.016 (− 0.07–0.03) | − 0.037 (− 0.09–0.01) | − 0.031*** (− 0.08–0.02) | − 0.045*** (− 0.09–0.01) | − 0.041 (− 0.09–0.01) |
| Private ( | 0.070 (− 0.01–0.15) | − 0.001 (− 0.08–0.08) | 0.122*** (0.04–0.20) | 0.137*** (0.06–0.21) | − 0.118 (− 0.19- -0.04) |
| Clinical patient contactb | |||||
| No patient contact ( | − 0.089* (− 0.18–0.00) | − 0.059 (− 0.15–0.03) | 0.090* (0.00–0.18) | 0.017 (− 0.07–0.11) | − 0.009 (− 0.10–0.08) |
| Some patient contact (1–12 h/week; | 0.060 (− 0.01–0.13) | − 0.010 (− 0.08–0.06) | 0.050 (− 0.02–0.12) | 0.026 (− 0.04–0.10) | − 0.062 (− 0.13–0.01) |
| Patient contact ca half of the time (13–26 h/week; | 0.002 (− 0.05–0.06) | − 0.004 (− 0.06–0.05) | − 0.060* (− 0.12- -0.00) | − 0.012 (− 0.07–0.04) | 0.068 (0.01–0.12) |
| Patient contact most of the time (27 h/week or more; | 0.028 (− 0.04–0.10) | 0.073* (0.01–0.14) | − 0.080* (− 0.15- -0.01) | − 0.031 (− 0.10–0.04) | 0.002 (− 0.07–0.07) |
| Medical Specialtyc | |||||
| Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine ( | 0.057 (− 0.08–0.20) | − 0.125 (− 0.26–0.01) | − 0.011 (− 0.15–0.13) | − 0.109 (− 0.25–0.03) | 0.011 (− 0.13–0.15) |
| Surgery ( | 0.089 (− 0.04–0.22) | 0.178** (0.52–0.30) | − 0.020 (− 0.15–0.11) | − 0.214** (− 0.34- -0.09) | − 0.184** (− 0.31- -0.06) |
| Pediatrics ( | 0.156* (0.01–0.30) | 0.090 (− 0.05–0.23) | 0.135 (− 0.01–0.28) | 0.084 (− 0.06–0.23) | − 0.098 (− 0.24–0.05) |
| Obstetrics and Gynecology ( | 0.078 (− 0.06–0.22) | 0.074 (− 0.06–0.21) | − 0.122*** (− 0.26–0.02) | 0.096 (− 0.04–0.23) | − 0.102 (− 0.24–0.04) |
| Psychiatry ( | − 0.112* (− 0.22- -0.00) | − 0.146** (− 0.25--0.04) | 0.235*** (0.12–0.34) | 0.010 (− 0.10–0.12) | 0.051 (− 0.06–0.16) |
| Medical Specialtyc | |||||
| Radiology ( | − 0.146 (− 0.33–0.03) | 0.059 (− 0.12–0.24) | 0.094 (− 0.08–0.27) | − 0.068 (− 0.25–0.11) | 0.136 (− 0.04–0.31) |
| Internal Medicine and Oncology ( | − 0.015 (− 0.17–0.14) | − 0.050 (− 0.20–0.10) | 0.019 (− 0.13–0.17) | 0.057 (− 0.10–0.21) | 0.109 (− 0.04–0.26) |
| Ophthalmology and Otorhinolaryngology ( | 0.091 (− 0.07–0.25) | 0.060 (− 0.10–0.22) | − 0.166 (− 0.33- -0.01) | − 0.010 (− 0.17–0.15) | 0.025 (− 0.14–0.19) |
| Other specialties of Internal Medicine ( | − 0.021 (− 0.12–0.07) | 0.095* (0.00–0.19) | 0.010 (− 0.08–0.10) | − 0.048 (− 0.14–0.05) | 0.087 (− 0.01–0.18) |
| Occupational Health ( | − 0.047 (− 0.17–0.07) | 0.008 (− 0.11–0.13) | − 0.011 (− 0.13–0.11) | 0 .183** (0.06–0.30) | − 0.100 (− 0.22–0.02) |
| General Practice ( | − 0.054 (− 0.14–0.03) | − 0.017 (− 0.10–0.07) | − 0.157*** (− 0.24- -0.07) | 0.098 (0.01–0.18) | 0.010 (− 0.08–0.10) |
| Hospital Service Specialties ( | − 0.074 (− 0.24–0.10) | − 0.226** (− 0.39- -0.06) | − 0.006 (− 0.17–0.16) | − 0.080 (− 0.25–0.09) | 0.054 (− 0.11–0.22) |
| Change of Specialtyd | |||||
| Specialty not changed ( | 0.015* (−0.06–0.08) | 0.029 (− 0.04–0.10) | 0.040* (− 0.03–0.11) | 0.068 (− 0.00–0.14) | − 0.110 (− 0.18- -0.04) |
| Specialty changed ( | 0.242* (0.04–0.44) | 0.065 (− 0.14–0.27) | 0.256* (0.05–0.46) | 0.264 (0.06–0.47) | − 0.295 (− 0.49- -0.10) |
Note. The results are based on analyses of covariance with posthoc tests for pairwise comparisons. β = Standardized regression coefficient (Mean = 0, SD = 1). 95% CI = 95% confidence interval for Exp (β). *p < 0.05: **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001. Scores for personality traits range from 1 to 5, with higher scores indicating higher levels of the trait
aAdjusted for gender, age, clinical patient contact (hours per week; treated as a continuous variable) and specialty. Physicians working in the public sector serve as a reference group
bAdjusted for gender, age, employment sector (public vs. private) and specialty
cAdjusted for gender, age, employment sector and clinical patient contact
dAdjusted for gender, age, employment sector and clinical patient contact (hours per week; treated as a continuous variable). Physicians who did not change their specialty serve as a reference group. Specialists who responded the first time to the survey only in 2015 (n = 1650) and who had missing data on some of the control variables (n = 201) were excluded from the analyses
b, c, dThe contrasts between groups are based on the standardized average mean (with a mean of zero and a standard deviation of one) of all specialists who form a reference group