Attitudes of medical students in Ireland towards psychiatry: Comparison of students from 1994 and 2010

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Abstract

Aims and method: We assess and compare: (a) the attitudes of final-year medical students in 2010 to their 1994 counterparts; (b) the attitudes of third-year medical students with those of their final-year colleagues; (c) the impact of two different teaching modules on students' attitudes. All students completing the year 3 psychiatry preclinical module and the final-year clinical clerkship were asked to anonymously complete three well-validated attitudinal questionnaires on the first and final day of their module in psychiatry. Results: These data indicate that Irish medical students have a positive attitude to psychiatry even prior to the start of their clinical training in psychiatry. This attitude is significantly more positive now than it was in 1994. A positive attitudinal change was brought about only by the final-year psychiatric clerkship. Students who have completed a degree prior to medicine are less likely to express an interest in a career in psychiatry. Clinical implications: If we are to address the recruitment difficulties in psychiatry we need to look at innovative and specific ways of translating these positive attitudes into careers in psychiatry. Declaration of interest: None.

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APA

O’Connor, K., O’Loughlin, K., Somers, C., Wilson, L., Pillay, D., Brennan, D., … Lane, A. (2012). Attitudes of medical students in Ireland towards psychiatry: Comparison of students from 1994 and 2010. Psychiatrist, 36(9), 349–356. https://doi.org/10.1192/pb.bp.111.037549

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