The Effect of Medical Education on Primary Care Orientation
- 1 April 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Academic Medicine
- Vol. 76 (4) , 355-365
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001888-200104000-00014
Abstract
Purpose To examine changes among a nationally representative sample of students and residents in their orientations toward primary care as reflected in their attitudes toward the psychosocial and technical aspects of medicine and their perceptions of the academic environment for primary care. Method Confidential telephone interviews of stratified national probability samples of first- and fourth-year medical students and residents were conducted in 1994 and 1997. The 1997 survey included 219 students and 241 residents who had also been interviewed in 1994. Participants were asked about their attitudes toward addressing psychosocial issues in medicine and their perceptions of faculty and peer attitudes toward primary care. Responses were compared over time and across groups. Results Between the first and fourth years of medical school, there was a decline over time in students' reported orientations to socioemotional aspects of patient care (61.6% versus 42.7%, p =.001) and their perceptions that working with psychosocial issues of patients made primary care more attractive (56.3% versus 43.5%, p =.01). This pattern continued for 1997 residents (PGY-3), who were even less likely to say that addressing psychosocial issues made primary care more attractive (26.9%). For fourth-year students in 1994 who became PGY-3 residents in 1997, there was an increased perception that non-primary-care house officers and specialty faculty had positive attitudes toward primary care (20.8% versus 33.0%, p = .005; 28.3% versus 45.7%, p <.0001; respectively). Conclusions Between 1994 and 1997 students and residents perceived a positive shift in the attitudes of peers and faculty toward primary care. During the course of their education and training, however, the students experienced an erosion of their orientations to primary care as they progressed through medical school into residency.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Enthusiasm for primary careJournal of General Internal Medicine, 1998
- Modifying the culture of medical educationAcademic Medicine, 1997
- Academia's Chilly Climate for Primary CarePublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1996
- Determinants of primary care specialty choiceAcademic Medicine, 1995
- Factors influencing the specialty choices of 1993 medical school graduates [published erratum appears in Acad Med 1994 Apr;69(4):290]Academic Medicine, 1994
- The Crisis in Primary Care and the Role of Medical SchoolsPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1992
- Comparing the characteristics of schools that produce high percentages and low percentages of primary care physiciansAcademic Medicine, 1992
- Relationship between third-year clerkships in family medicine and graduating studentsʼ choices of family practice careersAcademic Medicine, 1992
- Primary Care Applicants — They Get No RespectNew England Journal of Medicine, 1992
- Medical Student Interest in Internal MedicineAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1991