Medical career choice: Current status of research literature
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Teaching and Learning in Medicine
- Vol. 2 (3), 130-138
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10401339009539445
Abstract
This article examines the research evidence supporting relationships between both personal and social factors and the career choices of physicians in training. Although the research literature in this area is limited by a lack of longitudinal studies, a dependence on cross‐sectional designs, and a lack of multivariate investigations, data support relationships in each of the following areas: sociodemographic characteristics of student, student personality and attitudinal variables, institutional characteristics of the medical school, characteristics of the specialty training programs, and information available to students about the various careers. Additionally, this review investigates the stability of career preferences and career choices over time.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stress and Impairment during Residency Training: Strategies for Reduction, Identification, and ManagementAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1988
- Reasons for doctors' career choice and change of choiceBMJ, 1988
- The stability of early specialty preferences among US medical school graduates in 1983JAMA, 1988
- Market research into part time training: consumers' views and regional variations.BMJ, 1985
- The value of the California Psychological Inventory in predicting medical students' career choiceMedical Education, 1985
- Does Surgery Attract Students Who Are More Resistant to Stress?Annals of Surgery, 1984
- Doctors’ career choice: previous research and its relevance for policy-makingMedical Education, 1976
- Specialty choice and attitudes toward medical specialistsSocial Science & Medicine (1967), 1970
- Career Preference of Young British DoctorsMedical Education, 1968
- Factors in Student Choice of General or Specialty PracticeNew England Journal of Medicine, 1956