| Literature DB >> 33218189 |
Belinda O'Sullivan1, Matthew McGrail2, Tiana Gurney1, Priya Martin1.
Abstract
There is a lack of theory about what drives choice to be a generalist or specialist doctor, an important issue in many countries for increasing primary/preventative care. We did a realist evaluation to develop a theory to inform what works for whom, when and in what contexts, to yield doctors' choice to be a generalist or specialist. We interviewed 32 Australian doctors (graduates of a large university medical school) who had decided on a generalist (GP/public health) or specialist (all other specialties) career. They reflected on their personal responses to experiences at different times to stimulate their choice. Theory was refined and confirmed by testing it with 17 additional doctors of various specialties/career stages and by referring to wider literature. Our final theory showed the decision involved multi-level contextual factors intersecting with eight triggers to produce either a specialist or generalist choice. Both clinical and place-based exposures, as well as attributes, skills, norms and status of different fields affected choice. This occurred relative to the interests and expectations of different doctors, including their values for professional, socio-economic and lifestyle rewards, often intersecting with issues like gender and life stage. Applying this theory, it is possible to tailor selection and ongoing exposures to yield more generalists.Entities:
Keywords: attributes; career choice; doctors; experience; general practice; generalist; medical training; norms; realist evaluation; specialist; theory
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33218189 PMCID: PMC7699208 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17228566
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Interview guide used in phase 1.
| Question | Specific Prompts | General Prompts |
|---|---|---|
| Could we start by you telling me a little about yourself and your career as a doctor? | Things like your current practice location, area of medicine, stage of medical career, and where you did each stage of your medical training? | Could you please expand on that? |
| What are the major factors that have influenced your medical career journey to date? | Identify factors that influenced participant’s career decision, current practice location; area of clinical practice; amount of time devoted to clinical medicine; decision-making in the context of family situations, partner employment, incentives, professional support | |
| What were the important time points when things happened that determined the current shape of your medical career? | ||
| What made these time points important? | ||
| What happened at those times and how did they affect your career trajectory? | ||
| How much control have you had over how your medical career has turned out? | Things like; going to medical school, internship location, vocational training, geographical location of current clinical practice | |
| What are the factors that influenced (gave you more or restricted) that control? | ||
| How easy (or realistic) is it to change where you practice (geographically); and also your field of medical practice? | How flexible is a medical career; and does it vary at different times in one’s life? Does it vary by area of medical practice? By where you live (city/country)? | |
| Have you considered changing where you practice or your field of medical practice? | ||
| Have you had to move from where you were living to pursue a training opportunity, or to meet clinical/professional college requirements? | ||
| Did you later return to where you were? | ||
| Have you had breaks in practice? | ||
| Can you tell me the reasons for those breaks? | ||
| What would have made your medical career progression better informed? | ||
| What (else) would have improved the way your medical career has progressed? | ||
| Before I turn off the recording device, is there anything else you would like to comment on? |
Definition of notation used to depict participants in the text of phase 1 interviews a.
| Notation | Definition |
|---|---|
| J, T or F | junior doctor, trainee or fellow (defined in |
| R or M | working rurally or metropolitan |
| Male or Fem | male or female |
| Gen or Spec | Generalist (general practice or public health) or specialist (all others) based on self-reported interest/uptake of a chosen postgraduate field of medicine |
a All participants interviewed had decided on, commenced or recently completed a specialty field allowing the outcome to be measured. Rural work location was determined using official Modified Monash Model levels 2–7, which is the standard definition used by the Australian government for health policy [44].
Summary of phase 1 participants (n = 32) a.
| Characteristics | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Females | 16 (50) |
| Males | 16 (50) |
|
| |
| Junior—yet to start vocational training as registrar (typically PGY 1–5) | 8 (25) |
| Trainee—currently enrolled in specialty training (registrar) (typically PGY 3–10). | 10 (31) |
| Fellow—completed specialty (registrar) training (typically PGY 6–17) | 14 (44) |
|
| |
| Yes | 15 (47) |
| No | 17 (53) |
|
| |
| Yes | 8 (25) |
| No | 24 (75) |
|
| |
| Generalist | 12 (38) |
| Specialist | 20 (63) |
a Rural work location was determined using official Modified Monash Model levels 2–7, which is the standard definition used by the Australian government for health policy [44]. All participants interviewed had decided on, commenced or recently completed a specialty field allowing the outcome to be measured. ‘Generalist’ includes doctors interested, training or fellowed in general practice or public health physician. ‘Specialist’ included doctors interested, training or fellowed in focused fields –interviewees covering anaesthetics, ophthalmology, surgery, physician, radiology, psychiatry, dermatology.
Figure 1Mechanisms to produce a generalist or specialist doctor. For the mechanism ruling in or out.
Full theory about exposures (C) for doctors at different stages of training (C) triggering choice (M) to be a generalist or specialist doctor (O) .
| Outcome | Trigger for Choice (Mechanisms) | Doctor’s Characteristics/Timing of Exposure (Context) | Doctor’s Exposure (Context) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Specialisation choice (S or G) | ENVIRONMENTAL | ||
| A conversion | (S/G) Medical school and reinforced over time | (S) A key focused clinical experience or clicking with a Department or specialist clinician | |
| Ruling things in (G) or out (S) | (S/G) Mostly postgraduate | (S) Experiencing a range of areas of clinical medicine | |
| Validation and support | (S) Early postgraduate when impressionable | (S) Getting reinforcing feedback from senior clinician/s, focused clinical skills and endorsement/references for job/training applications | |
| PROFESSIONAL | |||
| Suits desired clinical practice | (S) Mostly postgraduate if do not have a fixed specialty ideation | (S) Being intellectually stimulated, enjoying procedural work and working in acute hospital care and comfortable with working in teams | |
| Fits personality, skills and norms | (S) Before medicine, medical school and postgraduate | (S) Having particular attributes—technical or soft skills and desire to align with social and professional norms | |
| Status and reward | (S) Medical school and reinforced over time, desire to optimise professional power and maintain income through market control | (S) Being sensitised that G have inferior skills and observing benefits of being known in tight professional network for doing a key skill well | |
| NON-PROFESSIONAL | |||
| Work-life balance and personal sustainability | (S–M) Mostly postgraduate, partner and older when completed medical school | (S–M) Observing specialty options with controlled working hours and feasible to complete (length, difficulty) | |
| Suits desired economic and social position | (S) Medical school and reinforced over time, desire to gain or uphold social status and financial security relative to familial and social expectations, cost/effort of training and potential remuneration for the working hours involved | (S/G) Observe benefits of socio-economic position | |
a Rural work location was determined using official Modified Monash Model levels 2–7 of the Australian government [44]. G refers to ‘Generalist’ and includes doctors interested, training or fellowed in general practice or as public health physicians. S refers to ‘Specialist’ and includes doctors interested, training or fellowed in focused fields –interviewees covering anaesthetics, ophthalmology, surgery, physician, radiology, psychiatry, oncology, dermatology.