Mentorship role in the choice of surgery as a career aMong Medical students in rwanda

introduction: Surgery stands as a popular career choice among medical students in Sub-Saharan Africa, but there are far too few surgeons per capita to treat the population that need care. Positive mentorship relationships during a student’s undergraduate medical education may promote the choice of Surgery as a path for post graduate residency training. The primary aim of this study is to discern the relative impact of close relationships between faculty and medical students on future medical career choice in Rwanda. Methods: The survey enrolled 135 final year medical students of the National University of Rwanda between January and May 2013. Medical students who completed their surgical rotation were all included into this study after informed consent. Data were collected, cleaned and analyzed using Microsoft Excel. Descriptive statistics, normal distributed and non-normal distributed analysis, student t-test, and non-parametric tests were used where appropriate. results: Participants were predominantly male (83.2%) and all respondents had recently completed an 8-week rotation on Surgery. Whereas 41.1% (n=39) of the respondents had interest in a surgical career prior to their last year of internship, only 30.9% (n=29) were likely to pursue a career to surgery as their top choice after completing their clinical rotations. Approximately half of the participants reported having their interest increased as a result of mentorship from surgical attendings / consultants (54.6%, n=52), and surgical residents (47.4%, n= 45). A minority of respondents (35.1%, n=33) reported having less contact with surgeons than with physicians from other specialties prior to their clerkship. Nearly half of the students interested in a career of surgery reported low satisfaction in their surgical clerkship (44.8%, n=13). conclusion: Surgical consultants and residents exert considerable influence on medical students interested in Surgery as a future career. Whether increasing social interaction and individualized/small groups interactions will actually increase the number of trainees choosing Surgery requires prospective testing.

[1]  L. Neumayer,et al.  Perceived gender-based barriers to careers in academic surgery. , 2013, American journal of surgery.

[2]  S. Ekenze,et al.  Undergraduate Surgery Clerkship and the Choice of Surgery as a Career: Perspective from a Developing Country , 2013, World Journal of Surgery.

[3]  T. Pritts,et al.  Surgeons underestimate their influence on medical students entering surgery. , 2012, The Journal of surgical research.

[4]  Aussama K. Nassar,et al.  The effect of general surgery clerkship rotation on the attitude of medical students towards general surgery as a future career. , 2012, Journal of surgical education.

[5]  R. Kaderli,et al.  Students' interest in becoming a general surgeon before and after a surgical clerkship in German-speaking Switzerland. , 2011, Swiss medical weekly.

[6]  D. Mahvi,et al.  Surgical career choices: the vital impact of mentoring. , 2009, The Journal of surgical research.

[7]  A. Rosemurgy,et al.  Surgeons can favorably influence career choices and goals for students interested in careers in medicine. , 2009, Journal of the American College of Surgeons.

[8]  Herb Chen,et al.  Effective surgical residents strongly influence medical students to pursue surgical careers. , 2005, Journal of the American College of Surgeons.

[9]  Herb Chen,et al.  Why do students choose careers in surgery? , 2003, The Journal of surgical research.

[10]  A. Lucci,et al.  Factors influencing career choice among medical students interested in surgery. , 2003, Current surgery.

[11]  R. McLeod,et al.  The impact of gender on the choice of surgery as a career. , 1996, American journal of surgery.

[12]  E. A. Ameh,et al.  Under representation of women in surgery in Nigeria: by choice or by design? , 2012, Oman medical journal.