Family physician pathway and medical student career choice. Ten years after curriculum change at the University of Washington
T. J. Phillips, M. J. Gordon, J. H. Leversee and C. K. Smith
In 1968 the University of Washington School of Medicine initiated a new
curriculum that included a family physician pathway. Six of these classes
have now graduated. Two thirds of the planned strategies for the pathway
were actually implemented. Approximately half of the students in each
second-year class now choose this pathway. Ninety percent of those
graduating have done so in the traditional four years. Seventy-three
percent of those in the pathway actually pursued family practice training
on graduation. Approximately one third of all University of Washington
graduates now enter training for family practice, one third enter internal
medicine, 10% enter surgical fields, and 8% enter pediatrics. These rates
represent significant increases in the proportion of students entering
directly into family practice, internal medicine, and pediatrics training.