Plastic surgery or primary care? Altruistic preferences and expected specialty choice of U.S. medical students.
【연구 목적】 의사 결정 과정에서 개인의 경제적 이해관계와 환자의 이익 간 갈등 상황에서 의사들의 이타적 성향이 전문과 선택에 미치는 영향을 규명하는 것이 본 연구의 핵심 목표이다.
APA
Li J (2018). Plastic surgery or primary care? Altruistic preferences and expected specialty choice of U.S. medical students.. Journal of health economics, 62, 45-59. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhealeco.2018.09.005
MLA
Li J. "Plastic surgery or primary care? Altruistic preferences and expected specialty choice of U.S. medical students.." Journal of health economics, vol. 62, 2018, pp. 45-59.
PMID
30273781
Abstract
Understanding physicians' decisions when faced with conflicts between their own financial self-interest and patients' economic or health interests is of key importance in health economics and policy. This issue is especially salient in certain medical specialties where less altruistic behavior of physicians can yield significant financial gains. This study examines experimentally measured altruistic preferences of medical students from schools around the U.S., and whether these preferences predict those students' expected medical specialty choice. The experimental design consists of a set of computer-based revealed preference decision problems, which ask the experimental subjects to allocate real money between themselves and an anonymous person. These data are used to derive an innovative measure of altruism for each participant. I then examine the association between altruism and expected specialty choice, after controlling for an extensive set of covariates collected from an accompanying survey questionnaire. Medical students with a lower degree of altruism are significantly more likely to choose high-income specialties, conditioning on an extensive set of covariates. This altruism measure is more predictive of income of specialty choice than a wide range of other characteristics, including parental income, student loan amount and Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) score. On the other hand, the altruism measure does not predict choosing primary care specialties. I also find that altruism predicts students' self-reported likelihood of practicing medicine in an underserved area.
MeSH Terms
Adult; Altruism; Career Choice; Female; Games, Experimental; Humans; Income; Male; Models, Theoretical; Physicians; Primary Health Care; Students, Medical; Surgery, Plastic; Surveys and Questionnaires; United States; Young Adult
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