Career choices, work patterns and perceptions of undergraduate education of McMaster medical graduates: comparison between men and women.
- 15 June 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 126 (12) , 1411-4
Abstract
A survey of the first six classes to graduate from McMaster University's medical school was carried out 5 years after graduation for the classes of 1972 to 1974 and 2 years after graduation for the classes of 1975 to 1977. Although the men and women entered similar fields of medicine the women were more likely to have taken time away from work and to be working fewer hours, and more women than men were influenced by their spouses in their career choices. More women than men expressed some dissatisfaction with the 3-year undergraduate program, and more women identified the "anxiety level created" as a weakness of the program. The women compared their preparation for the first year of postgraduate training with that of other trainees somewhat less favourably than did the men.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Forgotten persons: physicians' wives and their influence on medical career decisions.1977
- Selection of medical specialtiesAcademic Medicine, 1977
- The McMaster curriculum: a critique.BMJ, 1976
- Career choices of physicians 15 years after entering medical school.1975
- Career and training patterns of students entering Canadian medical schools in 1965.1975
- Medicine: A Career Conflict for WomenAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1973
- Medical studentsʼ attitudes toward rural practiceAcademic Medicine, 1973
- The academic performance of women students in medical schoolAcademic Medicine, 1973
- Special problems of women medical studentsAcademic Medicine, 1968
- A survey of women physicians in Canada, 1883-1964.1966