Login / Signup

Assessing the job preferences of senior medical students for mandatory service: a discrete choice experiment.

Buşra TozdumanMelih Kaan Sözmen
Published in: Primary health care research & development (2024)
All attributes had an impact on the job preferences of students with the following order of priority: salary, workload, proximity to family/friends, working environment, facility and developmental status. For a normal workload and a workplace closed to family/friends which were the most valued attributes after salary, WTPs were 2818.8 Turkish lira (TRY) ($398.7) and 2287.5 TRY ($323.6), respectively. The preference weights of various job characteristics were modified by gender, the presence of a HCW parent and willingness to perform mandatory service. To recruit young physicians where they are most needed, monetary incentives appear to be the most efficient intervention. Non-pecuniary job characteristics also affected job preferences. Packages of both monetary and non-monetary incentives tailored to individual characteristics would be the most efficient approach.
Keyphrases
  • social support
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • medical students
  • smoking cessation
  • decision making
  • randomized controlled trial
  • depressive symptoms
  • hiv testing
  • men who have sex with men