Literature DB >> 9200589

A study of medical students' specialty-choice pathways: trying on possible selves.

J H Burack1, D M Irby, J D Carline, D M Ambrozy, K E Ellsbury, F T Stritter.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To describe the decision-making processes reported by graduating medical students in choosing primary care (PC) or non-primary-care (NPC) specialties.
METHOD: Members of the University of Washington School of Medicine's graduating class of 1995 were invited to participate in focus groups. Six specialty-choice pathways were defined based on a previously administered survey of recalled preferences at matriculation and stated choice at the time of the National Resident Matching Program. Students were assigned to focus groups based on specialty-choice pathway. Transcribed discussions and summaries were thematically coded and analyzed using grounded theory and quantitative comparisons.
RESULTS: Of 157 students, 140 (89%) completed the initial survey, and 133 (85%) provided enough information to be classified by pathway. In all, 47 students participated in the focus group discussions. The PC students cited PC orientation, diversity of patients and activities, role models and mentors, interaction with patients, and overall medical school culture as having influenced their choice. The NPC students cited lifestyle, controllable hours, opportunities to do procedures, therapeutic urgency and effect, active tempo, exciting settings, and intellectual challenge. Role models influenced PC career choice much more than NPC career choice, and often served to refute negative stereotypes. The sense of personal fit between themselves and specialties was important to the students in all groups, but differed in emphasis according to career-choice pathways. Those whose preferences did not change experienced a confirmation of pre-existing beliefs, while those who switched specialty areas developed a sense of fit through the inclusion or elimination of different practice aspects. Those who switched specialty areas reported more negative influences and misunderstanding of their initially preferred specialties.
CONCLUSION: The process of specialty choice can be described usefully as a socially constructed process of "trying on possible selves" (i.e., projecting oneself into hypothetical career and personal roles). This may explain role models' exceptional influence in disproving negative stereotypes. Medical students' choices can best be facilitated by recognizing their needs to gain knowledge not only about specialty content, but also about practitioners' lives and the students' own present and possible selves.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9200589     DOI: 10.1097/00001888-199706000-00021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  41 in total

1.  Influencing career choice during residency.

Authors:  E E Reynolds
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  1999-08       Impact factor: 5.128

2.  Impact of desire to work in underserved communities on selection of specialty among fourth-year medical students.

Authors:  Mohsen Bazargan; Richard W Lindstrom; Alan Dakak; Chizobam Ani; Kenneth E Wolf; Ronald A Edelstein
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3.  Variation in predictors of primary care career choice by year and stage of training.

Authors:  Maureen T Connelly; Amy M Sullivan; Antoinette S Peters; Nancy Clark-Chiarelli; Natasha Zotov; Nina Martin; Steven R Simon; Judith D Singer; Susan D Block
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 5.128

4.  The impact of interest: how do family medicine interest groups influence medical students?

Authors:  Jonathan R Kerr; M Bianca Seaton; Heather Zimcik; Jennifer McCabe; Kymm Feldman
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5.  Why would I choose a career in family medicine?: Reflections of medical students at 3 universities.

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6.  Factors affecting choice of specialty among first-year medical students of four universities in different regions of Turkey.

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7.  Factors influencing the decision to pursue emergency medicine as a career among medical students in Singapore.

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8.  [Family medicine: the Cinderella of undergraduate studies? Study of the views of medical students about the speciality of family and community medicine].

Authors:  J Santos Suárez; M Santiago Alvarez; P Alonso Hernández; M Alonso Llamas; E Merladet Artiacha; E Corrales Fernández
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9.  Factors Associated With Residency and Career Dissatisfaction in Childbearing Surgical Residents.

Authors:  Erika L Rangel; Heather Lyu; Adil H Haider; Manuel Castillo-Angeles; Gerard M Doherty; Douglas S Smink
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10.  Choosing family medicine. What influences medical students?

Authors:  John Jordan; Judith Belle Brown; Grant Russell
Journal:  Can Fam Physician       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 3.275

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