James Cook University medical graduates opt for Regions



Posted in: Australian Medical Schools in Australia, James Cook Medical School
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JCU_Logo_RGBJames Cook University medical graduates are increasingly choosing to practice in regional and remote locations, a recent study shows.

 The study, James Cook University MBBS graduate intentions and intern destinations: a comparative study with other Queensland and Australian Medical schools, has been published in the Rural and Remote Health journal.

 It is the first large analysis of data on medical graduates from JCU and shows the University is producing doctors in a regional location, for regional locations, as opposed to cities.

 JCU first offered a Bachelor of Medicine/Bachelor of Surgery degree in 2000. It has consistently been very popular with people who live in North Queensland and surrounding regions – and appeals to prospective students from elsewhere who are hoping to pursue a medical career with a rural, tropical and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health focus.

 Professor Richard Murray, Head of JCU’s School of Medicine and Dentistry, said the results proved what many in the school had known.

 “This data shows proof of practice destinations, not just good intentions,” Professor Murray said.

 “While JCU’s School of Medicine encourages applications from students from rural and remote backgrounds, the data shows graduates are choosing to practice in these locations, compared to other Australian medical schools.”

 Professor Murray said since 1999, the number of medical school places in Australia had increased substantially in response to workforce shortages, with some of the increased capacity in regional and rural communities.

 “JCU’s School of Medicine, the first of a number of new medical schools, was established with a mission to address the health needs of rural, remote and tropical Australia through aligning student selection, curriculum and assessment practices to encourage generalist postgraduate careers needed in rural and regional areas.

 “This article reports early evidence on the career outcomes of graduates in the first six cohorts from 2005 to 2010, and compares this with available data from other Queensland and Australian medical schools.”

 Data was gathered from two sources to allow comparisons of career intentions and intern allocations of graduates from JCU with those from other Australian medical schools, he said.

“An exit survey of JCU graduates provided JCU student data while the Medical Students Outcomes Database provided comparable data for eight other, largely metropolitan, schools.

 “At graduation, 88 per cent of JCU medical students intended to practise outside Australian capital cities compared with 31 per cent of graduates from other medical schools.”

 More JCU medical graduates than others planned to work in rural towns or regional centres with a population of less than 100 000 (46 per cent, compared with 16 per cent for the rest of Australia).

 Professor Murray said 67 per cent of JCU graduates undertook their internship outside a metropolitan centre compared with 17 per cent of others, and 47 per cent in outer regional centres compared with 5 per cent, respectively.

 Medical graduates from JCU are also more likely to prefer general practice as a career, particularly rural medicine, but otherwise had similar preferences to others.

Interest in ‘working in a rural area’ increased over the course duration, from 68 per cent at entry to 76 per cent at graduation.

 “While further follow up is needed to track career progression over a longer time, the data so far suggest that the career outcomes of JCU medical graduates are aligned with the workforce needs of the region, and different from those graduating from Australia’s predominantly metropolitan medical schools, as predicted by the program’s design.”

 To access the article published in the Rural and Remote Health journal, visit:

http://www.rrh.org.au/articles/subviewnew.asp?ArticleID=2313

JCU Medical School offers an undergraduate program:  the Bachelor of Medicine Bachelor of Surgery.  It is six years in length.  There are 20-25 international places available.  Now is the time to apply with an application deadline of August 31st.

For more information on the JCU Medical School or Australian Medical Schools in Australia, contact KOM Consultants.