4.5 Article

Admissions experiences of aspiring physicians from low-income backgrounds

Journal

MEDICAL EDUCATION
Volume 55, Issue 7, Pages 840-849

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/medu.14462

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine at McMaster University
  2. Black Aspiring Physicians of McMaster Youth Opportunities Fund

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This qualitative study examines the experiences of aspiring physicians from low-income backgrounds as they work towards gaining admission to medical school in Canada. The participants faced various barriers, including social, identity-related, economic, structural, and informational, while intrinsic facilitators such as motivation, self-confidence, and information-seeking, and extrinsic facilitators like social, financial, and institutional support were also identified. This study helps identify target areas for developing support to increase the representation of low-income students in Canadian medical schools.
Introduction Students from low-income backgrounds (LIB) have been under-represented in Canadian medical schools for over fifty years. Despite our awareness of this problem, little is known about the experiences of aspiring physicians from LIB in Canada who are working towards medical school admission. Consequently, we have little insight into the barriers and facilitators that may be used to increase the representation of students from LIB in Canadian medical schools. Methods This paper describes a qualitative description interview study aimed at understanding the experiences of aspiring physicians from LIB as they attempt to gain entry to medical school. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 21 participants at different stages of their undergraduate, master's, and non-medical professional education, and used the theories of intersectionality and identity capital as a theoretical framework for identifying barriers and facilitators to a career in medicine. Results Participants experienced social, identity-related, economic, structural and informational barriers to a career in medicine. Intrinsic facilitators included motivation, self-confidence, attitude, strategy, information-seeking and sorting, and financial literacy and increasing income. Extrinsic facilitators were social, informational, financial and institutional in nature. Conclusion This study fills existing knowledge gaps in the literature by identifying the pre-admissions barriers and facilitators encountered by aspiring physicians from LIB in Canada. The barriers and facilitators outlined in this study offer a framework for identifying target areas in developing support for admitting medical students from LIB. Given that medical students from LIB are more likely to serve underserved populations, our study is relevant to Canadian medical schools' social accountability commitment to producing physicians that meet the health needs of marginalised and vulnerable patients.

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