DOCTORS WHO QUALIFIED IN THE UK BETWEEN 1974 AND 1993 - AGE, GENDER, NATIONALITY, MARITAL-STATUS AND FAMILY FORMATION

Citation
Tw. Lambert et al., DOCTORS WHO QUALIFIED IN THE UK BETWEEN 1974 AND 1993 - AGE, GENDER, NATIONALITY, MARITAL-STATUS AND FAMILY FORMATION, Medical education, 32(5), 1998, pp. 533-537
Citations number
13
Categorie Soggetti
Education, Scientific Disciplines","Medical Informatics
Journal title
ISSN journal
03080110
Volume
32
Issue
5
Year of publication
1998
Pages
533 - 537
Database
ISI
SICI code
0308-0110(1998)32:5<533:DWQITU>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
We report on some demographic characteristics of junior doctors in the United Kingdom, studied in six national cohorts of qualifiers between 1974 and 1993. Over the 20 years covered by the data, the percentage of qualifiers who were women increased substantially (from 27% in 1974 to 47% in 1993). Between 1983 and 1993, the number of women qualifier s rose by 242 (a 17% rise) and the number of men fell by 430 (a fall o f 18%). Of all doctors, 52% were aged 23 years or less when they quali fied and there was no increase over time in mature qualifiers. We repo rt on increases in the percentage of doctors who qualified in the UK b ut who were born outside it (from 11% to 16%). The percentage of respo ndents who were married at the end of the first year after qualificati on declined from 45% in 1974 to 15% in 1993, At 25 years of age, 2% of the women doctors who qualified in 1983 had children compared with 45 % of women aged 25 in the general population. Two-thirds of the women doctors had children by their mid-30s.