A comparison of the professional values and career orientations of male and female medical students: Some unintended consequences of U.S. public policy

Gary L. Burkett, Dorothy E. Kurz
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

During the 1970s, partly as a response to U.S. public policy which promoted the objective of equal opportunity for women, there was a dramatic increase in the proportion of women entering careers in medicine. Some observers have expressed the expectation that these women physicians will promote progressive changes in health care and that they will be more likely to emphasize “humanistic” aspects of treating patients. This paper presents data from a national survey of U.S. medical students which provides a comparison of several relevant characteristics of these male and female students. There are several important areas where significant differences are apparent. Women students are more likely to place greater importance on the desire to help people as a career motivation, for example, and are less likely to express satisfaction with the status quo in American health care. There are also significant male-female differences in career plans with respect to areas such as specialty choice and preference for practice setting. These findings are used to consider the question of the probable impact of increased numbers of women physicians on the future of American health care. Projections for the future are made more difficult because of important changes within the medical profession and in the context of health care organization, but it is clear that women physicians do represent some potential for progressive change in American medicine.

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男女医学生职业价值观和职业取向的比较:美国公共政策的一些意想不到的后果
在20世纪70年代,部分作为对美国促进妇女机会平等目标的公共政策的回应,进入医学职业的女性比例急剧增加。一些观察人士期望,这些女医生将促进保健方面的渐进式变革,她们将更有可能强调治疗病人的"人文"方面。本文介绍了一项对美国医学生的全国性调查数据,该调查提供了这些男学生和女学生的几个相关特征的比较。有几个重要领域的显著差异是显而易见的。例如,女学生更有可能把帮助别人的愿望作为职业动机,而不太可能对美国医疗保健的现状表示满意。在专业选择和实践环境偏好等方面,男女在职业规划方面也存在显著差异。这些发现被用来考虑女性医生数量增加对美国医疗保健未来可能产生的影响的问题。由于医学专业和卫生保健组织的重大变化,对未来的预测变得更加困难,但很明显,女医生确实代表了美国医学进步变革的一些潜力。
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