Medical school effect on student selection of physical medicine and rehabilitation as a specialty

Leonard F. Bender, Marcel P.J.M. Dijkers

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Of the several roads that lead to practice in the specialty of physical medcine and rehabilitation (PM&R), the most common is from a US medical school to a PM&R residency to specialty practice. To reduce the predicted shortage of PM&R physicians, more medical students must be attracted to the specialty. Past studies have failed to show success of various mechanisms, designed to expose students to the field, to attract to the residency programs. The current study was designed to further explore the medical school factors contributing to choice of the PM&R residency. The number of PM&R residents produced by each of the US medical schools was related to various characteristics of these schools: size, presence of a PM&R department, presence of a PM&R residency program. Only school size was found to explain the sizable observed variation in number of residents. Additional research incorporating quality and quantity of curricular exposure to PM&R is suggested.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)783-789
Number of pages7
JournalArchives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Volume67
Issue number11
StatePublished - Nov 1986
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Internship
  • Medical schools
  • Physical medicine
  • Physicians
  • Undergraduate medical education
  • residency

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