Literature DB >> 7860321

Predictors of young physicians practicing specialties without prior graduate medical education.

D A Bertram1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study identifies predictors of young physicians practicing specialties for which they did not report having graduate medical education. DATA SOURCE: A secondary analysis was conducted using a nationally representative survey of young physicians, Practice Patterns of Young Physicians, 1987 (United States). Physicians were under 40 years of age and in uninterrupted practice more than one but fewer than six complete years. STUDY
DESIGN: Young physicians who practiced specialties without prior graduate medical education (GME) in these specialties were compared to young physicians who practiced only the specialties for which they reported GME. Comparisons were made on sociodemographic characteristics, international medical graduate status, number and types of GME specialties, year completed GME, and preference for a practice position that was not offered. DATA EXTRACTION
METHODS: Sample size was 4,440, including 345 (7.8 percent) physicians who practiced specialties without prior GME. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify predictors of young physicians practicing specialties without prior GME. PRINCIPAL
FINDINGS: Physicians who practiced specialties without prior GME more likely were younger, members of minorities other than Black, and with a physician father, high medical school educational debt, and GME in the more generalist specialties. Interaction effects occurred among sex, marital status, and having had GME in internal medicine. Goodness-of-fit analyses indicated that the predictors were useful, but classification table results indicated that at best two out of three cases could be correctly classified.
CONCLUSIONS: Practicing specialties without prior graduate medical education in those specialties was related to sociodemographic characteristics and type of specialty training, but a fuller understanding of the circumstances affecting physician specialty changes will require querying physicians directly about their practice choices.

Mesh:

Year:  1995        PMID: 7860321      PMCID: PMC1070040     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Serv Res        ISSN: 0017-9124            Impact factor:   3.402


  20 in total

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5.  Medical education indebtedness: does it affect physician specialty choice?

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Authors:  S Lemeshow; D W Hosmer
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Journal:  J Med Educ       Date:  1982-06

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Authors:  J Lorber
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Authors:  H Wechsler; J L Dorsey; J D Bovey
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1978-01-05       Impact factor: 91.245

10.  The practice patterns, life styles, and stresses of women and men entering medicine: a follow-up study of Harvard Medical School graduates from 1967 to 1977.

Authors:  C C Nadelson; M T Notman; P Lowenstein
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