Medical Deans ANZ
- 32% of respondents indicated a preference for a career working outside a metropolitan area
(table 25)
- Students from a rural background expressed higher levels of desire to practice in rural or regional locations
- 35 per cent of respondents from rural backgrounds had a preference to work in a large, medium or small rural town, or remote/very remote community versus 7% of respondents from a non-rural background (table 26)
- Of those students undertaking a rural placement of more than a year, 34 per cent expressed a preference for practice in a large, medium or small rural town, or remote/very remote community (table 27)
- The comparative figures are 23% for those where the duration was 6 to 12 months, 13% where it was up to 6 months, and 9% for those not undertaking a rural placement
- Members of a university Rural Health Club were 4 times more likely to express a preference for a future practice outside a capital city.
- Students from a rural background expressed higher levels of desire to practice in rural or regional locations
- The overall numbers of those interested in a GP career remain steady:
- With an increasing proportion of these preferencing Rural Generalism
- The most highly ranked factors influencing preferred future specialty remain “alignment with personal values” and “atmosphere/culture typical of the discipline” (table 35)
- Students continue to express high levels of interest in their future career involving teaching (80%) and research (51%), although both of these continue to decrease (tables 28 and 29)
- Half of domestic students and over a quarter of international students want Indigenous health
as a part of their future medical career (table 30)
- 79% indicated they were ‘satisfied’ or ‘very satisfied’ with their medical program. The
proportion ‘dissatisfied’ or ‘highly dissatisfied’ was 9% (table 19)
- 81% ‘agreed’ or ‘strongly agreed’ their medical degree was preparing them well to work as an intern, which is a slight increase from last year, and 5% saying they ‘disagreed’ or ‘strongly
disagreed’ (table 20)
/Public Release.