Literature DB >> 625976

Medical school graduates who leave California. A study at the University of California, San Francisco.

H G Gough, W B Hall.   

Abstract

A follow-up survey of 1,087 physicians who had graduated from the University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine from 1951 through 1971 was completed in 1977. A total of 307 (28.2 percent) of these persons were found to have left California. Comparison of the 307 who left with the 780 who remained showed only slight and statistically insignificant differences on most variables, such as sex, academic performance in premedical and medical education, educational level and social class of parents, age at entry into medical school, ratings by admissions interviewers, choice of specialty and a wide variety of personality inventory measures. Among the variables that did differentiate were place of birth, location and prestige of premedical college, preferences for subjects in the sciences and the humanities, and the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) scores for quantitative ability and general information. However, attempts to combine these individual differentiators into clusters or equations from which to forecast emigration from California were unsuccessful.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1978        PMID: 625976      PMCID: PMC1237989     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  West J Med        ISSN: 0093-0415


  4 in total

1.  Specialty preferences of physicians and medical students.

Authors:  H G Gough
Journal:  J Med Educ       Date:  1975-06

2.  A comparison of medical students from medical and nonmedical families.

Authors:  H G Gough; W B Hall
Journal:  J Med Educ       Date:  1977-07

3.  Personality changes in a sample of women physicians.

Authors:  L K Cartwright
Journal:  J Med Educ       Date:  1977-06

4.  Physician migration from inland to coastal states: antipodal examples of Illinois and California.

Authors:  P De Vise
Journal:  J Med Educ       Date:  1973-02
  4 in total

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