Specialty preferences among medical students in Botswana

Abstract Background With the establishment of a new medical college in Botswana to train generalist-doctors and specialists, we set out to explore the career preferences of medical students, factors that influence their choices and attitude to local postgraduate training. Methods A descriptive cross...

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Published in:BMC Research Notes
Main Authors: Ambrose Rukewe, W. A. Abebe, A. A. Fatiregun, M. Kgantshang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-06-01
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-017-2523-y
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author Ambrose Rukewe
W. A. Abebe
A. A. Fatiregun
M. Kgantshang
author_facet Ambrose Rukewe
W. A. Abebe
A. A. Fatiregun
M. Kgantshang
author_sort Ambrose Rukewe
collection DOAJ
container_title BMC Research Notes
description Abstract Background With the establishment of a new medical college in Botswana to train generalist-doctors and specialists, we set out to explore the career preferences of medical students, factors that influence their choices and attitude to local postgraduate training. Methods A descriptive cross-sectional questionnaire-based study was conducted among medical students in their third to fifth year, at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Botswana. The structured, self-administered questionnaires which were hand-delivered covered demographic characteristics of responders, career choices, preferred location of specialisation and factors that influenced the choices. Results Of the 143 medical students approached, 116 (81.0%) returned completed questionnaires. Of the responders, 102 (87.9%) intend to pursue postgraduate specialisation against 2 (1.7%) who declined; 12 (10.3%) were undecided. The four most preferred specialties which constituted 68.1% were surgery (28.4%), paediatrics (19.0%), internal medicine (12.9%), obstetrics and gynaecology (7.2%). There was male preference for surgery (p = 0.04), while women were drawn more towards paediatrics and psychiatry (p = 0.04 and p = 0.01, respectively). Personal interest and aptitude was considered the most important factor among most responders (46.2%), followed by enjoyment of the posting (19.8%). A high proportion of responders 80 (69.0%) preferred to specialise abroad for better exposure/opportunities (48.3%), while for 15.5%, their preferred courses are not currently available locally. Conclusion Our findings indicated that while four major specialties are preferred, significant gender differences exist with female students leaning towards non-surgical disciplines. Students prefer specialising abroad on the pretext that foreign centres offer better training opportunities, and many specialist programmes are unavailable locally.
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spelling doaj-art-e44b5cb6a3fe42dba1b0bae5272c8e802025-08-19T21:14:44ZengBMCBMC Research Notes1756-05002017-06-011011510.1186/s13104-017-2523-ySpecialty preferences among medical students in BotswanaAmbrose Rukewe0W. A. Abebe1A. A. Fatiregun2M. Kgantshang3Department of Anaesthesia, University of BotswanaDepartment of Anaesthesia, University of BotswanaWorld Health OrganisationDepartment of Anaesthesia, Princess Marina HospitalAbstract Background With the establishment of a new medical college in Botswana to train generalist-doctors and specialists, we set out to explore the career preferences of medical students, factors that influence their choices and attitude to local postgraduate training. Methods A descriptive cross-sectional questionnaire-based study was conducted among medical students in their third to fifth year, at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Botswana. The structured, self-administered questionnaires which were hand-delivered covered demographic characteristics of responders, career choices, preferred location of specialisation and factors that influenced the choices. Results Of the 143 medical students approached, 116 (81.0%) returned completed questionnaires. Of the responders, 102 (87.9%) intend to pursue postgraduate specialisation against 2 (1.7%) who declined; 12 (10.3%) were undecided. The four most preferred specialties which constituted 68.1% were surgery (28.4%), paediatrics (19.0%), internal medicine (12.9%), obstetrics and gynaecology (7.2%). There was male preference for surgery (p = 0.04), while women were drawn more towards paediatrics and psychiatry (p = 0.04 and p = 0.01, respectively). Personal interest and aptitude was considered the most important factor among most responders (46.2%), followed by enjoyment of the posting (19.8%). A high proportion of responders 80 (69.0%) preferred to specialise abroad for better exposure/opportunities (48.3%), while for 15.5%, their preferred courses are not currently available locally. Conclusion Our findings indicated that while four major specialties are preferred, significant gender differences exist with female students leaning towards non-surgical disciplines. Students prefer specialising abroad on the pretext that foreign centres offer better training opportunities, and many specialist programmes are unavailable locally.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-017-2523-ySpecialtySpecialisationMedical studentsBotswana
spellingShingle Ambrose Rukewe
W. A. Abebe
A. A. Fatiregun
M. Kgantshang
Specialty preferences among medical students in Botswana
Specialty
Specialisation
Medical students
Botswana
title Specialty preferences among medical students in Botswana
title_full Specialty preferences among medical students in Botswana
title_fullStr Specialty preferences among medical students in Botswana
title_full_unstemmed Specialty preferences among medical students in Botswana
title_short Specialty preferences among medical students in Botswana
title_sort specialty preferences among medical students in botswana
topic Specialty
Specialisation
Medical students
Botswana
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-017-2523-y
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