Survey on employment intention of medical students in China
10.3760/cma.j.issn.1671-7368.2019.03.006
- VernacularTitle:中国八所大学临床医学本科生全科医学基层就业倾向调查分析
- Author:
Huiling XIA
1
;
Zhigang PAN
;
Tianhao WANG
;
Jian WANG
;
Jie GU
;
Hua YANG
;
Qian CHEN
Author Information
1. 复旦大学附属中山医院全科医学科
- Keywords:
Career choice;
Questionnaire;
General practice
- From:
Chinese Journal of General Practitioners
2019;18(3):236-240
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective To survey the employment intention of medical students of five-year program in China.Methods A self-administered questionnaire survey on the employment intention was conducted among grade-5 medical students of 5-year program in 8 medical schools from January to June 2017,395 participants (161 males and 234 females) were selected by stratified random cluster sampling method.Results The survey showed that 57.65% (226/392) respondents would return hometown after graduation as their first choice,20.66% (81/392) preferred to work in large cities,only 0.76% (3/292) chose the Western and rural areas;20.05% (78/389) responders were willing to be a general practitioner working at the community health center,56.55% (220/389) did not decide,while 23.40% (91/389) did not want to be general practitioner.Students from rural areas vs.from urban areas (24.30% vs.15.08%),whose parents with lower educational level vs.higher educational level (30.62% vs.25.71%),from medical school in Western regions vs.in Eastern regions (28.65% vs.11.68%) were more willing to choose general practice(P<0.05).Students who had clerkship or rotation of general medicine vs.who had not more like the specialty of general practice (27.63% vs.15.66%,P<0.05),but there was no significant difference in the employment intention to be a general practitioner (19.93% vs.20.45%,P>0.05).Students who knew grassroots employment policies were more willing to be general practitioners (25.48% vs.13.02%,P<0.05).Conclusion The survey shows that the employment intention to be a general practitioner is stronger than before among medical students.But it is still need to take necessary measures to attract more medical graduates to work as general practitioners in grass-roots communities.