Influence of longitudinal primary care training on medical students' specialty choices

Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges
A H HeroldT Micceri

Abstract

At the University of South Florida College of Medicine, a program designed to give students four years of primary care training began in 1983. As of 1992, six classes that included program participants had graduated. The present study examined the effect of the program on the participants' choices of specialty by comparing their choices with those of other graduates. Each year program volunteers were solicited from a class size of about 96 freshmen. Of the 201 volunteers from the classes of 1987-1992, 93 were randomly selected to participate in the program. The participants received primary care education one half-day per week in a community-based clinical setting. The specialty choices of the 543 graduates from 1987-1992 were determined from the National Resident Matching Program and were divided into primary care (family practice, internal medicine, pediatrics); surgery, obstetrics-gynecology, and psychiatry; and other (high-technology specialties). Comparisons were made (1) between volunteers and nonvolunteers and (2) between volunteers who were participants and those who were not. The Z-test was used, with alpha set at .01. Significantly more volunteers--with no difference between participants and nonparticipants--matched w...Continue Reading

Citations

Aug 5, 2000·Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges·M E Magzoub, H G Schmidt
Dec 24, 2003·Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges·Linda Z NiemanThomas C Prager
Mar 28, 2006·Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges·Linda Z NiemanPatricia Butler
Mar 21, 2002·Journal of General Internal Medicine·M S GraysonK B Franke
Jul 16, 2015·Journal of General Internal Medicine·Eva PfarrwallerDagmar M Haller
Jul 1, 2015·The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews·Liesl GroblerSikhumbuzo Mabunda
Jul 13, 2012·The Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine, New York·Lauren A PeccoraloLinda V DeCherrie

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