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Indigenous students in medical education: Seeding success in motivating doctors to serve underserved indigenous communities

Seeding Success in Indigenous Australian Higher Education

ISBN: 978-1-78190-686-6, eISBN: 978-1-78190-687-3

Publication date: 20 November 2013

Abstract

Purpose

Rural Australian patients continue to receive inadequate medical attention. One potential solution to this is to train Indigenous Australians to become medical doctors and return to their community to serve their people. The study aims to examine whether Indigenous medical students have a stronger intention to practice in underserved communities.

Methodology

A sample of Indigenous (N = 17) and non-Indigenous students (N = 188) from a medical program in Sydney was surveyed about their medical self-concept and motivation. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was conducted, group differences were tested, and correlation patterns were examined.

Findings

CFA found seven distinct factors – three medical self-concepts (affective, cognitive, and cultural competence), one motivation factor, and three work-related variables – intention to serve underserved communities (intention), understanding of Indigenous health (understanding), and work-related anxiety (anxiety). Indigenous medical students were higher in cultural competence, intention, and understanding. Both the affective and cognitive components of medical self-concept were more highly correlated with intention and understanding for Indigenous students than for non-Indigenous students.

Research implications

It is important to examine medical students’ self-concepts as well as their cultural characteristics and strengths that seed success in promoting service to underserved Indigenous communities.

Practical implications

The findings show that Indigenous medical students tended to understand Indigenous health issues better and to be more willing to serve underserved Indigenous communities. By enhancing both the affective and cognitive components of medical self-concepts, the “home-grown” medical education program is more likely to produce medical doctors to serve underserved communities with a good understanding of Indigenous health.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgment

The research was funded by the Australian Research Council.

Citation

Yeung, A.S., Craven, R.G., Wilson, I., Ali, J. and Li, B. (2013), "Indigenous students in medical education: Seeding success in motivating doctors to serve underserved indigenous communities", Seeding Success in Indigenous Australian Higher Education (Diversity in Higher Education, Vol. 14), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 277-300. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-3644(2013)0000014012

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2013 Emerald Group Publishing Limited