Your search found the following article in our index:

The Impact of the Internal Medicine Sub-internship on Medical Student Career Choice.

Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2010


OBJECTIVE: Determine the immediate and longer-term effect of the medicine sub-internship on students' decision to pursue internal medicine residency.
MEASUREMENTS: Survey administered prior to and immediately after the sub-internship and prior to the match.
Questions included likelihood of applying in internal medicine and perceived impact of the sub-internship on career choice.
MAIN RESULTS: Seventy-seven percent of students (N = 63) completed the first two surveys; 63% (N = 58) completed the second and third.
Immediately post sub-internship, 21% (N = 13) were less likely to apply in internal medicine and 11% (N = 7) were more likely to apply (net change in plans was not significant, p = 0.38).
There was a significant relationship between the perceived impact of the sub-internship and likelihood of applying in medicine (ANOVA comparison across means, p < 0.001).
Compared to the second survey, on the third survey more students (41%, N = 24) believed the sub-internship positively impacted their decision to apply in medicine, though overall shifting was not significant (p = 0.39).
Key themes describing sub-internship impact included the intense workload, value of experiencing internship, rewards of assuming the physician role, and education received (30%, 25%, 20% and 16% of comments, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS: Overall, there was not a significant effect of the sub-internship on students' decision to apply in internal medicine.
Additional research about the relative impact of the sub-internship in relationship to other career choice predictors is needed to better address factors that may encourage or dissuade students from pursuing internal medicine.

View rest of article at www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov «

Related articles

Below are some of our articles related to the article above:

The TRIP Database is a clinical search tool designed to allow health professionals to rapidly identify the highest quality clinical evidence for clinical practice.

Registered users (registration is free) benefit from extra features such as CPD, search history, and collaborative tools. Register here, or Login if you have registered before.

Find out more about Trip Database.