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. 2010 Sep;25(9):947-53.
doi: 10.1007/s11606-010-1401-2. Epub 2010 May 26.

Professional experiences of international medical graduates practicing primary care in the United States

Affiliations

Professional experiences of international medical graduates practicing primary care in the United States

Peggy Guey-Chi Chen et al. J Gen Intern Med. 2010 Sep.

Abstract

Background: International medical graduates (IMGs) comprise approximately 25% of the US physician workforce, with significant representation in primary care and care of vulnerable populations. Despite the central role of IMGs in the US healthcare system, understanding of their professional experiences is limited.

Objective: To characterize the professional experiences of non-US born IMGs from limited-resource nations practicing primary care in the US.

Design: Qualitative study based on in-depth in-person interviews.

Participants: Purposeful sample of IMGs (n = 25) diverse in country of origin, length of practice in the US, specialty (internal medicine, family medicine and pediatrics), age and gender. Participants were currently practicing primary care physicians in New York, New Jersey or Connecticut.

Approach: A standardized interview guide was used to explore professional experiences of IMGs.

Key results: Four recurrent and unifying themes characterize these experiences: 1) IMGs experience both overt and subtle forms of workplace bias and discrimination; 2) IMGs recognize professional limitations as part of "the deal"; 3) IMGs describe challenges in the transition to the culture and practice of medicine in the US; 4) IMGs bring unique skills and advantages to the workplace.

Conclusions: Our data reveal that IMGs face workplace challenges throughout their careers. Despite diversity in professional background and demographic characteristics, IMGs in our study reported common experiences in the transition to and practice of medicine in the US. Findings suggest that both workforce and workplace interventions are needed to enable IMG physicians to sustain their essential and growing role in the US healthcare system. Finally, commonalities with experiences of other minority groups within the US healthcare system suggest that optimizing IMGs' experiences may also improve the experiences of an increasingly diverse healthcare workforce.

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