Contemporary Australian socio-cultural factors and their influence on medical student rural career intent

AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF RURAL HEALTH(2022)

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摘要
Objective To understand how contemporary socio-cultural factors may impact medical students' rural career intent. Design Cross-sectional study using data from the national Federation of Rural Australian Medical Educators survey. Participants/setting Medical students across 18 Australian universities who completed a full academic year of clinical training in rural areas in 2019. Main outcome measure(s) Preferred location of practice post-training reported to be either: (i) a major city; (ii) a regional area or large town; or (iii) a small rural location. Results In total, 626 students completed the survey (70.1% response rate). A small rural location was the most preferred location of practice after graduation for 28.3% of the students (95% CI 21.6-36.0). Four socio-cultural factors were positively associated with a preference for a rural career location: poor health status of rural people, motor vehicle traffic congestion in cities, rural generalist training opportunities in the state and the Royal Flying Doctor Service. Other socio-cultural factors, including specialists' under-employment, Medicare freeze effect on doctors' income, bullying/sexual harassment in hospitals, climate change/natural disasters or recognised rural health personalities did not influence the investigated outcome. Conclusions Our findings indicate a novel association between contemporary socio-cultural factors and rural career intention in a cohort of Australian rural clinical school students. These findings advocate for further consideration of research exploring socio-cultural factors shaping rural career intent and workforce outcomes.
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关键词
career choice, family medicine, health workforce, rural health
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