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Journal of the National Medical Association logoLink to Journal of the National Medical Association
. 1994 Jul;86(7):509–515.

Primary care by desire or default? Specialty choices of minority graduates of US medical schools in 1983.

D Babbott 1, S O Weaver 1, D C Baldwin Jr 1
PMCID: PMC2607597  PMID: 8064901

Abstract

This study was undertaken to determine if US medical school students of different racial/ethnic backgrounds demonstrate similar patterns of evolution of specialty choice between their senior year of medical school and their third postgraduate year. The study identified the specialty choices of US medical school seniors in 1983 through their responses to the Association of American Medical Colleges Graduating Medical Student Questionnaire (GQ). The cohort was classified into three groups: underrepresented minorities, non-underrepresented minorities, and whites. Using these AAMC data as baseline, each racial/ethnic background group was tracked through their third residency year. Comparisons were made between anticipated specialty choices as senior medical students and actual specialties as revealed through residency tracking. The study found that more than 95% of the cohort began residencies in specialties compatible with their GQ choices. Unexpectedly, almost 20% of blacks, Commonwealth Puerto Ricans, and other Hispanics were not in graduate medical education in their third postgraduate year. This group needs to be studied further in order to learn the proportion of these physicians who subsequently completed residency training and the reason(s) for attrition in physicians who did not fulfill minimum training requirements for board certification.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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