| Literature DB >> 31727026 |
Carlos Gutiérrez-Cirlos1,2, J Jesús Naveja2, Manuel García-Minjares3, Adrián Martínez-González2,3, Melchor Sánchez-Mendiola4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The choice of medical specialty is related to multiple factors, students' values, and specialty perceptions. Research in this area is needed in low- and middle-income countries, where the alignment of specialty training with national healthcare needs has a complex local interdependency. The study aimed to identify factors that influence specialty choice among medical students.Entities:
Keywords: Career choice; Graduate studies; México; Professional identity; Residency training
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31727026 PMCID: PMC6854711 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-019-1830-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Average importance of each item compared by chosen specialty and sex in senior medical students at UNAM Faculty of Medicine in Mexico City (n = 697). 0 = not determinant, 3 = most determinant. Numbers in parentheses represent the order of importance of each item
| Item | GSa | OB/GYN | IM | FM | Peds | Women | Men |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of patients in the specialty | 2.2 (5) | 2.5 (1) | 2.5 (1) | 2.0 (5) | 2.5 (1) | 2.4 (2) | 2.3 (2) |
| Variety of medical problems in the specialty | 2.1 (6) | 2.1 (5) | 2.5 (2) | 1.9 (10) | 2.2 (8) | 2.2 (4) | 2.2 (6) |
| Work to do during the specialty | 2.2 (4) | 2.4 (3) | 2.4 (3) | 2.3 (2) | 2.5 (2) | 2.4 (1) | 2.3 (3) |
| Specialty social engagement | 1.8 (10) | 2.0 (9) | 2.1 (9) | 1.9 (9) | 2.2 (6) | 2.0 (9) | 1.9 (9) |
| Possibility of studying a subspecialty | 2.2 (2) | 2.1 (7) | 2.2 (7) | 1.6 (13) | 2.2 (7) | 2.1 (7) | 2.2 (5) |
| Opportunities to perform research | 1.6 (14) | 1.3 (15) | 1.6 (13) | 1.4 (17) | 1.5 (14) | 1.5 (14) | 1.7 (13) |
| Specialty duration | 1.9 (12) | 1.5 (13) | 1.5 (16) | 2.1 (4) | 1.8 (12) | 1.7 (13) | 1.6 (14) |
| Expectation of free time | 1.6 (15) | 1.6 (12) | 1.7 (12) | 1.9 (9) | 1.8 (13) | 1.8 (12) | 1.7 (12) |
| Possibility of raising a family | 1.8 (11) | 1.8 (10) | 1.7 (12) | 1.9 (9) | 1.9 (10) | 1.8 (10) | 1.8 (10) |
| Potential autonomy after graduation | 2.0 (8) | 2.1 (8) | 2.1 (8) | 1.9 (12) | 2.0 (9) | 2.0 (8) | 2.1 (7) |
| Financial reasons | 1.4 (17) | 1.5 (14) | 1.3 (17) | 1.4 (15) | 1.4 (16) | 1.3 (17) | 1.4 (17) |
| Family support during the specialty | 1.8 (9) | 1.8 (11) | 1.8 (10) | 2.0 (6) | 1.9 (11) | 1.8 (11) | 1.8 (11) |
| Role models | 1.5 (16) | 1.3 (17) | 1.6 (14) | 1.5 (14) | 1.5 (15) | 1.4 (15) | 1.6 (15) |
| Pleasant academic experience in the specialty | 2.2 (4) | 2.1 (6) | 2.3 (5) | 2.2 (3) | 2.3 (4) | 2.2 (5) | 2.3 (4) |
| Medical internship with pleasant experiences in the specialty | 2.1 (7) | 2.1 (4) | 2.2 (6) | 1.9 (12) | 2.3 (5) | 2.1 (6) | 2.0 (8) |
| Specialty prestige | 1.6 (13) | 1.3 (16) | 1.6 (15) | 1.4 (17) | 1.2 (17) | 1.4 (16) | 1.5 (16) |
| To have skills related to the specialty | 2.2 (1) | 2.4 (2) | 2.4 (4) | 2.5 (1) | 2.4 (3) | 2.3 (3) | 2.4 (1) |
aGS general surgery, OB/GYN gynecology and obstetrics, IM internal medicine, FM family medicine, Peds pediatrics
Factor analysisa of determinants of specialty preference in senior medical students at UNAM Faculty of Medicine in Mexico City (n = 697). The last column shows the mean importance of the item (0 = not determinant; 3 = most determinant)
| Item | Personal values during undergraduate training (F1) | Career needs to be satisfied (F2) | Perception of the specialty characteristics (F3) | Mean importance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interest in the specialty patient type | 0.77 | – | – | 2.3 |
| Variety of medical problems in the specialty | 0.74 | – | – | 2.2 |
| Work to do during the specialty | 0.69 | – | – | 2.4 |
| Specialty social engagement | 0.60 | – | – | 2.0 |
| Possibility of studying a subspecialty | 0.50 | – | – | 2.1 |
| Opportunities to perform research | 0.40 | – | – | 1.6 |
| Specialty duration | – | 0.77 | – | 1.7 |
| The expectation of free time | – | 0.76 | – | 1.8 |
| Possibility of raising a family | – | 0.72 | – | 1.8 |
| Potential autonomy after graduation | – | 0.58 | – | 2.0 |
| Financial reasons | – | 0.44 | – | 1.4 |
| Family support during the specialty | – | 0.41 | – | 1.8 |
| Role models | – | – | 0.68 | 1.5 |
| Pleasant academic experience in the specialty | – | – | 0.63 | 2.2 |
| Medical internship with pleasant experiences in the specialty | – | – | 0.62 | 2.1 |
| Specialty prestige | – | – | 0.57 | 1.4 |
| To have skills related to the specialty | – | – | 0.42 | 2.2 |
| Alpha | 0.73 | 0.71 | 0.65 | – |
| Variance explained | 24.0% | 12.4% | 8.3% | – |
| Cumulative variance explained | 24.0% | 36.4% | 47.7% | – |
aExtraction method: principal components. Rotation method: Kaiser varimax normalization. Factor loading considered ≥0.4
Fig. 1Scree plot showing the variance contribution of 17 factors for specialty choice in senior medical students, UNAM Faculty of Medicine in Mexico City (n = 697). The first three (F1 to F3) explain 47.7% of the total variance