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. 2008 Sep 16;149(6):416-20.
doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-149-6-200809160-00008.

Educational debt and reported career plans among internal medicine residents

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Educational debt and reported career plans among internal medicine residents

Furman S McDonald et al. Ann Intern Med. .

Abstract

Background: Physicians often enter the workplace with substantial debt. The relationship between debt and reported career plans among internal medicine residents is unknown.

Objective: To determine distributions of educational debt among internal medicine residents and associations of debt with reported career plans.

Design: Cross-sectional survey using data from the annual Internal Medicine In-Training Examination Residents Questionnaire completed by U.S. categorical internal medicine residents.

Setting: Categorical internal medicine residencies in the United States.

Participants: 22,563 residents in their third (final) year of residency, representing 74.1% of all eligible U.S. categorical internal medicine residents from 2003 through 2007.

Measurements: Distributions of educational debt were tabulated. Proportions of residents choosing career plans were calculated for various levels of debt.

Results: International medical graduates represented 48.7% of the cross section and had considerably less debt than U.S. medical graduates: 53.8% of U.S. medical graduates had debt of 100,000 dollars or greater and 60.2% of international medical graduates had none. U.S. medical graduates with debt of 100,000 dollars to 150,000 dollars were less likely than those with no debt to choose a subspecialty career (57.5% vs. 63.5%). U.S. medical graduates with debt of 50,000 dollars to 99,999 dollars were more likely than those with no debt to choose a hospitalist career (8.5% vs. 6.2%), and this preference increased with increasing debt level (10.0% for those with >150,000 dollars debt). These associations are more pronounced for U.S. medical graduates than for international medical graduates.

Limitation: The study addressed total educational debt, but not when it was incurred, and did not allow inferences related to causality.

Conclusion: Educational debt is associated with differences in reported career plans among internal medicine residents.

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Comment in

  • When money doesn't change everything.
    Grover A. Grover A. Ann Intern Med. 2008 Sep 16;149(6):429-30. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-149-6-200809160-00011. Ann Intern Med. 2008. PMID: 18794564 No abstract available.

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