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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 3/2021

01-03-2021 | Original Research

Relationship Between Confidence, Gender, and Career Choice in Internal Medicine

Authors: Katherine Gavinski, MD, MPH, Erin Cleveland, MD, Aashish K. Didwania, MD, Joseph M. Feinglass, PhD, Melanie S. Sulistio, MD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 3/2021

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Abstract

Background

Understanding factors in internal medicine (IM) resident career choice may reveal important needed interventions for recruitment and diversity in IM primary care and its subspecialties. Self-reported learner confidence is higher in men than in women in certain areas of practicing medicine, but has never been explored as a factor in career choice.

Objective

The purpose of this study is to elucidate associations between confidence, gender, and career choice.

Design

IM residents completed a 31-item survey rating confidence in procedural, clinical, and communication skills on a 9-point Likert scale. Residents also reported anticipated career choice and rated influence of factors. Associations between gender and confidence scale scores, gender and career choice, and confidence and career choice were analyzed using t tests, ANOVA, and multiple linear regression controlled for postgraduate year (PGY), institution, and specialty choice.

Participants

292 IM residents at Northwestern and University of Texas (UT) Southwestern

Main Measures

Resident gender, self-reported confidence, career choice

Key Results

Response rate was 79.6% (n = 292), of them 50.3% women. Overall self-reported confidence increased with training (PGY-1 4.9 (1.1); PGY-2 6.2 (1.0); PGY-3 7.4 (1.0); p < 0.001). Men had higher confidence than women (men 6.6 (1.5); women 6.3 (1.4), p = 0.06), with the greatest difference in procedures. High confidence in men was associated with choice of procedural careers, whereas there was no association between confidence and career in women.

Conclusions

This is the first study demonstrating a gender difference in self-reported confidence and career choice. There is a positive correlation in men: higher self-reported confidence with procedural specialties, lower with general internal medicine. Women’s self-reported confidence had no association. Further investigation is needed to elucidate causative factors for differences in self-reported confidence by gender, and whether alterations in level of self-reported confidence produce a downstream effect on career choice.
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Metadata
Title
Relationship Between Confidence, Gender, and Career Choice in Internal Medicine
Authors
Katherine Gavinski, MD, MPH
Erin Cleveland, MD
Aashish K. Didwania, MD
Joseph M. Feinglass, PhD
Melanie S. Sulistio, MD
Publication date
01-03-2021
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 3/2021
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-020-06221-2

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