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Speciality interests and career calling to medicine among first-year medical students.
Perspectives on Medical Education 2013 Februrary
The construct of calling has recently been applied to the vocation of medicine. We explored whether medical students endorse the presence of a calling or a search for a calling and how calling related to initial speciality interest. 574 first-year medical students (84 % response rate) were administered the Brief Calling Survey and indicated their speciality interest. For presence of a calling, the median response was mostly true for: 'I have a calling to a particular kind of work' and moderately true for: 'I have a good understanding of my calling as it applies to my career'. For search for a calling, median response was mildly true: 'I am trying to figure out my calling in my career' and 'I am searching for my calling as it applies to my career'. Mann-Whitney U (p < 0.05) results indicate that students interested in primary care (n = 185) versus non-primary care (n = 389) are more likely to endorse the presence of a calling. Students were more likely to endorse the presence of a calling rather than a search for a calling, with those interested in primary care expressing stronger presence of a calling to medicine.
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