| Literature DB >> 30828606 |
Carolin Verena Herbst1, Brigitte Müller-Hilke1.
Abstract
Aim: Graduation rates among medical students who have been admitted to medical school from the waiting list quota are significantly lower than those for medical students who are directly admitted on the basis of their competitive secondary school academic record or through the universities' selection process. The aim of this study was to identify risk factors that can predict a longer length of study or dropping out and potential resilience factors predictive of timely and successful graduation. Method: First, students admitted from the waiting list were asked in qualitative interviews at the beginning of their studies about risk factors connected with dropping out. These students were then followed until completion of the first state medical exam, or at least until the end of their fourth semester. In parallel, personality traits were measured using the NEO Five-Factor Inventory according to Costa and McCrae (NEO-FFI). Successful study was defined as a length of study time lasting four semesters before taking the first section of the state medical exam (Physikum). Serving as indicators for students at risk were a prolonged period of study and dropping out before taking the first state medical examination. Finally, the factors associated with successful study were identified.Entities:
Keywords: NEO-Five-Factor-Inventory; drop-out; medical school admission; motivation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30828606 PMCID: PMC6390092 DOI: 10.3205/zma001214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: GMS J Med Educ ISSN: 2366-5017
Table 1Sociodemographic profile of the study participants
Figure 1The bar graph shows the frequency of times the different reasons were cited for pursing the study of medicine. The light-colored bars represent the successful students who passed the first state exam (Physikum) within the standard number of semesters. The darker bars depict the at-risk students who either studied longer than the standard number of semesters before passing the first state exam or discontinued their medical studies. The asterisk indicates the statistically significant difference between successful and at-risk students in the identification of dissatisfaction with the former job. Fisher’s exact test was performed for the calculation.
Figure 2The bar graph shows the frequency of times the ambition categories were cited as reasons for studying medicine. The light-colored bars represent the successful students who passed the first state exam (Physikum) within the standard number of semesters. The darker bars depict the at-risk students who either studied longer than the standard number of semester before passing the first state exam or discontinued their medical studies.
Figure 3The scatter diagrams show the results of the NEO-FFI for the different personalities as T values. The mean values ± two standard deviations are shown by gray bars. Each dot represents a student: the lighter dots indicate successful students, the darker ones stand for at-risk students. Unpaired T tests were carried out for the calculations.