# Medical Students’ Perspectives on Careers in Hospital Medicine: A National Study

**Authors:** Anne Catherine Miller Cramer, Sandra A. Ham, Yassen Alkaddoumi, Kamel Ibrahim, Shalini T. Reddy, John D. Yoon, Neel Sharma, BALAJI ARUMUGAM, Paula Whittaker

PMC · DOI: 10.15694/mep.2017.000207 · MedEdPublish · 2017-11-20

## TL;DR

This study explores why medical students choose hospital medicine as a career, finding that perceptions of burnout across specialties influence their decisions.

## Contribution

The study identifies burnout perception as a novel factor influencing medical students' interest in hospitalist careers.

## Key findings

- Hospitalist-oriented students were more likely to cite burnout as a key factor in their career choice.
- The adjusted response rate for the fourth-year survey was 50%, with 463 students participating.

## Abstract

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Purpose: Concerns over burnout and other factors may influence whether students pursue hospital medicine as a career. We investigate whether there are certain predictive factors that ultimately play a role in medical students’ career interest in hospital medicine.

Methods: In January 2011, 960 third-year medical students from 24 U.S. allopathic medical schools were surveyed at baseline, and six to nine months later when they became fourth-years at follow-up. Hospitalist-oriented students were categorized as those students who indicated interest in the specialties of family medicine, internal medicine, or pediatrics, and who indicated that they were “very likely” or “somewhat likely” to become a hospitalist. Respondents were also asked to respond to a list of seven factors that potentially influenced their specialty choice.

Results: Adjusted response rate for the fourth-year survey was 50% (n=463/919). Medical students considering hospitalist careers were more likely to report that perceived burnout between various specialties played an important influential role in their specialty decision-making (49.7% [42.2-57.2%], vs. non-hospitalists 39.9% [32.8-47.0%], P=0.03).

Conclusions: Given that students are reporting burnout as a factor in their decision-making in favor of hospitalist careers, further studies are needed to explore what aspects of a hospitalist career are appealing to students.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** burnout (MESH:D002055)

## Full text

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## References

12 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10885226/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10885226