What does it take? The influence of rural upbringing and sense of rural background on medical students' intention to work in a rural environment.

INTRODUCTION There is abundant evidence that rural origin is an influence on rural career choice. Rural origin is widely used to select students to be supported into programs designed to address the rural medical workforce shortage. What is not as clear is how many years of rural upbringing are required to have a maximal effect on rural career choice. Neither is the place of having a sense of rural background well understood. METHODS A cross-sectional self-completed paper-based survey of all students in years one through four of the Monash University medical course was undertaken in 2003. The survey included a scale to measure stated rural career intention as well as questions about the number of years of rural upbringing and whether students had a sense of rural background. The Rural Intention score was divided into three categories: strong urban intent, strong rural intent, and an intermediate, less certain intent. RESULTS There was an 88% (n = 399) response rate from students holding Commonwealth Supported Places. Approximately 30% of these claimed a sense of rural background, and 28% had more than 8 years of rural upbringing. Twenty-five percent stated a strong intention to choose a rural career and 34.5% had strong urban intent. The remaining 40.5% were in the intermediate group. Almost all students (97.5%) with over 5 years of rural upbringing had developed a sense of rural background, and almost all (97.5%) with less than 5 years' rural upbringing denied a sense of rural background. Rural intent was high for those with a sense of rural background and those with more than 8 years of rural upbringing, but the students who had had from 4 to 8 years of rural upbringing mainly fell into the 'uncertain' category. DISCUSSION In this cohort of almost 400 Australian medical students, a sense of rural background developed at a clear point, around 5 years of rural upbringing. Students with a sense of rural background were likely to develop a strong rural intent several years before similar students who had failed to make this connection with a rural community. This latter group displayed uncertainty toward a rural career choice, possibly due to unfamiliarity. Unlike those with strong urban intent, these students have not excluded a rural career and should be supported. The inclusion of a measure of the intention of students to work in a rural environment is likely to increase the reliability and validity of selection procedures.

[1]  Jacob Cohen Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences , 1969, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[2]  A. Muula How do we define 'rurality' in the teaching on medical demography? , 2007, Rural and remote health.

[3]  Doctors in vocational training: rural background and rural practice intentions. , 2005, The Australian journal of rural health.

[4]  I. Couper Rural hospital focus: defining rural. , 2003, Rural and remote health.

[5]  Anne W. Taylor,et al.  Self-reported patterns of health services utilisation: an urban-rural comparison in South Australia. , 2003, The Australian journal of rural health.

[6]  R. Strasser,et al.  Do rural mentors, rural undergraduate clubs and rural rotations increase the medical student's intention to practise in the country? , 2002 .

[7]  Nicole L. Chamberlain,et al.  Associations between rural background and where South Australian general practitioners work , 2000, The Medical journal of Australia.

[8]  J. Diamond,et al.  Demographic, educational and economic factors related to recruitment and retention of physicians in rural Pennsylvania. , 1999, The Journal of rural health : official journal of the American Rural Health Association and the National Rural Health Care Association.

[9]  M. Cutchin Community and self: concepts for rural physician integration and retention. , 1997, Social science & medicine.

[10]  M. Cutchin Physician retention in rural communities: the perspective of experiential place integration. , 1997, Health & place.