• Health policy · Nov 2006

    Greek medical students' career choices indicate strong tendency towards specialization and training abroad.

    • Efthimios D Avgerinos, Pavlos Msaouel, George A Koussidis, Nikolaos C Keramaris, Zacharias Bessas, and Konstantinos Gourgoulianis.
    • Second Department of Surgery, General Hospital Asclepeion Voulas, Athens, Greece.
    • Health Policy. 2006 Nov 1;79(1):101-6.

    AbstractThe aim of the study was to investigate the career choices, location preferences and criteria among medical students in Greece. We applied a questionnaire-based analysis using a sample of 591 students of four out of seven Greek Medical Schools. The sample included students of all academic years. The vast majority of students wish to specialize (97.6%), while general practice gathered a very low percentage (1.7%). The scientific challenge (61.4%) and interaction with patients (60.6%) seem to be the major influencing factors for most of the students' specialty preferences, whilst less common variables influencing career choice are the high demand/supply ratio for certain health services (40.4%), the income potential (31.4%), the active tempo (26.2%) and prestige (15%). 70.3% of those asked consider the possibility of specializing abroad. The low concern of Greek medical students for general practice reveals today's drastic deficiency in Greek primary health care. Such a situation will escalate, unless targeted strategies to produce more general practitioners are adopted. Furthermore, the results reflect a lower education and organizing level urging students to specialize abroad. The National Health System (NHS) should be reformed towards a rationalistic distribution of the medical specialties and medical workforce.

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