# Ageism in Training: Measuring Attitudes Among Medical, Social Work, and PA Students

**Authors:** Euna Cho, Diane Martin

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1921 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study finds that medical, social work, and PA students hold moderate ageist attitudes, suggesting a need for education to reduce stereotypes about older adults.

## Contribution

The study is novel in assessing ageist attitudes among healthcare students, revealing consistent mid-range discrimination and avoidance scores across disciplines.

## Key findings

- All student groups showed moderate beliefs in limiting older adults' roles and abilities based on discrimination scores.
- Medical and PA students exhibited moderate tendencies to socially distance themselves from older adults.
- No significant differences in ageist attitudes were found between medical, social work, and PA students.

## Abstract

Ageism in healthcare negatively affects older adults’ health outcomes and increases healthcare costs. Research shows that healthcare professionals such as physicians and social workers hold ageist attitudes. However, there is limited research on the attitudes toward older adults of healthcare students. This study aimed to assess ageist attitudes among first- and second-year graduate and professional students. Fifty-four students (14 medical, 14 social work, and 26 physician assistant) completed the Fraboni Scale of Ageism (FSA) — a validated tool measuring three components of ageist attitudes: Antilocution (negative language; 10 items); Discrimination (unequal treatment; 9 items); Avoidance (social distancing; 10 items). Ageist attitudes were present across healthcare student disciplines, with no significant differences between groups. While the three groups scored in the low-range for antilocution, they all notably scored in the mid-range for discrimination (medical students M = 15.33, SD = 2.09; physician assistant students M = 15.52, SD = 2.94, social work students M = 16.1, SD = 3.21), suggesting a moderate belief in limiting older adults’ roles and abilities. Additionally, avoidance scores for medical students (M = 17.20; SD = 4.41) and physician assistant students (M = 17.45; SD = 3.85) indicate a moderate tendency to distance themselves from older adults. These findings illustrate the need to design and incorporate healthcare education and training that challenges age-related stereotypes, reduces social distancing behaviors, and promotes a more accurate and compassionate understanding of aging and older adults across professional healthcare disciplines.

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761632