AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers explored the international context of medical education by applying Hofstede's cultural dimensions to a specific population of medical students and trainees, addressing a gap in previous studies that focused on the general population.
  • A cross-cultural online survey was conducted with over 2,500 participants from 16 countries to assess their cultural values and professional behaviors according to Hofstede's six dimensions.
  • Findings revealed that cultural dimensions like power distance and masculinity are similar across the countries studied, while uncertainty avoidance varied significantly, indicating unique cultural dynamics within the medical student community compared to general populations.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The global mobility of medical student and trainee populations has drawn researchers' attention to consider internationalization in medical education. Recently, researchers have focused on cultural diversity, predominately drawing on Hofstede's cross-cultural analysis of cultural dimensions from general population data to explain their findings. However, to date no research has been specifically undertaken to examine cultural dimensions within a medical student or trainee population. This is problematic as within-country differences between gender and professional groups have been identified within these dimensions. We address this gap by drawing on the theoretical concept of national context effects: specifically Hofstede's six-dimensional perspective. In doing so we examine medical students' and trainees' country profiles across dimensions, country-by-gender clustering, and differences between our data and Hofstede's general population data.

Methods: We undertook a cross-cultural online questionnaire study (eight languages) containing Hofstede's 2013 Values Survey. Our questionnaire was live between 1st March to 19th Aug 2018, and December 2018 to mitigate country holiday periods. We recruited undergraduate medical students and trainees with at least 6-months' clinical training using school-specific methods including emails, announcements, and snowballing.

Results: We received 2,529 responses. Sixteen countries were retained for analyses ( = 2,307, 91%): Australia, Chile, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, South Korea, Sri-Lanka, Taiwan. Power distance and masculinity are homogenous across countries. Uncertainty avoidance shows the greatest diversity. We identified four country clusters. Masculinity and uncertainty are uncorrelated with Hofstede's general population data.

Conclusions: Our medical student and trainee data provides medical education researchers with more appropriate cultural dimension profiles than those from general population data. Country cluster profiles stimulate useful hypotheses for further research, especially as patterning between clusters cuts across traditional Eastern-Western divides with national culture being stronger than gendered influences. The Uncertainty dimension with its complex pattern across clusters is a particularly fruitful avenue for further investigation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8862177PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.746288DOI Listing

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