The consequences of cultural difference: the international medical graduate journey in New Zealand.

IF 1.6 Q2 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES International Journal of Medical Education Pub Date : 2023-04-28 DOI:10.5116/ijme.6440.0e37
Mariska M Mannes, Davinia J Thornley, Tim J Wilkinson
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Objectives: To identify how differences in cultural and professional values between New Zealand born and trained doctors and International Medical Graduates (IMGs) affect the practice and retention of IMGs in New Zealand.

Methods: A mixed-method approach was used. An anonymous 42-item online questionnaire was used to compare participants' cultural and professional values. Participants were 373 New Zealand doctors, 198 IMG, and 25 doctors born and raised elsewhere but who qualified in New Zealand, a group not identified prospectively. The qualitative component used interviews with 14 IMGs to identify cultural challenges faced and with nine New Zealand doctors to identify the challenges they faced working alongside IMGs. Qualitative data were transcribed and analysed thematically.

Results: There were differences in power distance, with the medically qualified in New Zealand doctors having the highest power distance, followed by the IMGs, suggesting a preference for a hierarchical environment at odds with the New Zealand culture. Interviews found cultural differences in communication styles and hierarchy contributed to professional challenges. The cultural transition was difficult for IMGs as they received minimal support. One-third of IMGs acknowledged their behaviours did not fit well in New Zealand. Complaints about IMGs increased when they reverted to default behaviours regarded negatively by New Zealand colleagues or patients.

Conclusions: IMGs are open to change but face a lack of orientation and cultural education opportunities, hindering integration. Residency programs must recognise this disconnect and incorporate cross-cultural programmes in the curriculum. Such programmes would assist the adaption and retention of IMG doctors.

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文化差异的后果:国际医学毕业生在新西兰的旅程。
目的:确定新西兰出生和训练的医生与国际医学毕业生(IMGs)之间的文化和专业价值观差异如何影响新西兰国际医学毕业生的实践和保留。方法:采用混合方法。一份包含42个条目的匿名在线问卷被用来比较参与者的文化和职业价值观。参与者包括373名新西兰医生,198名IMG医生,以及25名在其他地方出生和长大但在新西兰合格的医生,这一群体尚未确定。定性部分使用了对14名img的访谈来确定所面临的文化挑战,并与9名新西兰医生进行了访谈,以确定他们在与img一起工作时面临的挑战。对定性数据进行转录和专题分析。结果:在权力距离上存在差异,新西兰医学合格的医生拥有最高的权力距离,其次是img,这表明他们更喜欢与新西兰文化不一致的等级环境。采访发现,沟通方式和等级制度的文化差异导致了职业挑战。对于img来说,文化转型是困难的,因为他们得到的支持很少。三分之一的img承认,他们的行为不太适合新西兰。当他们恢复到新西兰同事或患者认为消极的默认行为时,对img的投诉增加了。结论:img对变化持开放态度,但缺乏定位和文化教育机会,阻碍了融合。住院医师项目必须认识到这种脱节,并在课程中纳入跨文化项目。这类方案将有助于适应和留住IMG医生。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Medical Education
International Journal of Medical Education EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES-
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
3.20%
发文量
38
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