Implications of not matching to a first-choice discipline: a family medicine perspective

Auteurs-es

  • Wayne Woloschuk University of Calgary
  • Douglas Myhre University of Calgary
  • James Dickinson University of Calgary
  • Shelley Ross University of Alberta

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.36834/cmej.36842

Mots-clés :

family medicine, residents, CaRMS match, lifestyle satisfaction, well-being, identity

Résumé

Background: Family medicine is often selected as an alternate career choice by medical students who do not match to their first choice discipline. Consequently, family medicine residency programs accept and train some residents who prepared for and intended a career in another specialty. The implications of this warrant investigation.

Methods: Graduates (2006-2011) of Albertan family medicine residency programs were surveyed to examine differences between physicians who indicated family medicine was their first choice discipline and those who indicated that it was not their first choice. Survey questions targeted practice location, preparedness for practice, perceptions of family medicine, lifestyle satisfaction, and well-being. Principal components analysis was used to examine the factor structure of our survey items and ANOVA and Chi square were used to compare mean scores and proportions, respectively.

Results: The overall response rate was 47.2% (307/651). Most (263) respondents reported that family medicine was their first choice discipline (yes-group); 42 respondents indicated that it was not (no-group) and two did not answer. The two groups were similar demographically. The no-group reported significantly lower mean scores on perceptions of family medicine. There were no significant differences between the two groups in their preparedness for practice and measures of lifestyle satisfaction and well-being.

Conclusion: Irrespective of their perceptions of the discipline, the respondents who did not match to their first choice discipline found family medicine to be a viable career option.

Bibliographies de l'auteur-e

Wayne Woloschuk, University of Calgary

Program Evaluation Consultant,

Cumming School of Medicine

Douglas Myhre, University of Calgary

Associate Dean,

Distributed Learning and Rural Initiatives,

Cumming School of Medicine

 

James Dickinson, University of Calgary

Professor of Family Medicine and Community Health Sciences,

Cumming School of Medicine

Shelley Ross, University of Alberta

Associate Professor and Medical Education Researcher

Department of Family Medicine

Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry

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Publié-e

2017-07-04

Comment citer

1.
Woloschuk W, Myhre D, Dickinson J, Ross S. Implications of not matching to a first-choice discipline: a family medicine perspective. Can. Med. Ed. J [Internet]. 4 juill. 2017 [cité 19 déc. 2024];8(3):e30-36. Disponible à: https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/cmej/article/view/36842

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