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Swimming upstream: Internal medicine as career choice by medical students What is the role of academic internists?. Hospitalists Best Practices Conference April 29, 2010 J Rush Pierce Jr , MD, MPH. Questions?.
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Swimming upstream: Internal medicine as career choice by medical studentsWhat is the role of academic internists? Hospitalists Best Practices Conference April 29, 2010 J Rush Pierce Jr, MD, MPH
Questions? • To what extent are US medical students choosing general internal medicine as a career? • What influences career choice of US medical students? • What do our professional organizations say? • What should we do?
Change in US medical school graduate career choice, 1998 - 2007
UNM students matching into categorical IM residencies, 2010 • Muskan Behl Emory • Heidi Hillesland Univ Washington • Jonas Hines UCSF • Brandon Peterson Univ Virginia 4/71 matched = 5.6%
Percentage of UNM categorical IM residency positions filled by UNM students average of other years vs 2010 Χ2 = 4.28, p =0.04
Reasons for declining interest in IM by US medical students • Rising medical school debt 2. Lifestyle issues 3. Reimbursement
Medical School Debt and career choice • AAMC: over 86% graduates have educational debt, averaging $145K from public schools and $180K from private schools • AAMC: Students with debt >$150K less likely to select primary care residency • Univ Minn: students with more debt chose specialties over primary care • Student surveys have not shown consistent correlation
Older data on career choices • 1990 survey: deterrents from IM = time and workload demands; perceived physician satisfaction, types of patients seen • 2002: Controllable lifestyle accounts for 55% of variance in student specialty choice • 2003 survey: residents are willing to trade income for lifestyle benefits of more vacation and more predictable schedule
Role models and primary care • Preceptorship with general internists assoc with choosing career in IM (2 studies pos, 1 study neg, all in 1990’s) • Students with positive IM mentor 5X as likely to choose IM as career (sev studies in 1990’s)
Characteristics of study • Surveyed 1,439 MS4 at 10 US medical schools, after submitted rank list and before match • Demographics, perception of IM compared to other specialties • What influenced career decision • Sponsored by CDIM • 82% response rate, 23% into IM, demographics same as US medical students
IM Core Clerkship • 78% satisfied with core clerkship • 19% felt that core clerkship made career in general IM attractive • 49% that core clerkship made career in subspecialty IM attractive • 78% felt that medical school experience provided them with enough insight into what internist does to make informed career decision
Perceptions of IM training and career • IM requires more paperwork (68%) • IM requires greater breadth of knowledge (62%) • IM has lower income potential (65%) • IM residency less competitive (58%) • IM residents less satisfied that residents in other specialties (51%)
Career choice influences • Positives: • Intellectual challenge of IM • Continuity of care in IM • Competence of IM residents • Level of responsibility for patient care during core clerkship and sub-I • Negatives: • Paperwork and charting • Attractiveness of other specialties • Types of pts seen • Need to bring home work
Role modeling • Role modeling by internists, as manifested by encouraging students to choose the field and job satisfaction, was less favorable than role modeling in other specialties • Internal medicine, family medicine, and surgery were the specialties most likely not to be chosen based on “bad mouthing” of the discipline by physicians and other students
Options for us • Mentorship • How should we mentor students? • How do we encourage this in residents? • IM Interest group • What can we do? • Should we have Phase 1 students shadow us? • Curriculum • Should we modify core clerkship, sub-I? • Advocacy