@article {Carlinbjgpopen20X101132, author = {Emmet Carlin and Hugh Alberti and Kristen Davies}, title = {Denigration of general practice as a career choice: The students{\textquoteright} perspective. A qualitative study}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, elocation-id = {bjgpopen20X101132}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.3399/bjgpopen20X101132}, publisher = {Royal College of General Practitioners}, abstract = {Background General practice in the UK and other parts of the world is facing a recruitment crisis with insufficient numbers of medical students selecting it as a career choice. Denigration of general practice has been postulated as one of the contributing factors.Aim To explore comments about general practice as a career made by clinical teachers from the medical student{\textquoteright}s perspective, and in doing so to further understand the current difficulties of recruiting into general practice.Design \& setting A qualitative, explorative study of three focus groups of medical students from two medical schools in northern England.Method A semi-structured interview format was utilised. The following four questions were posed to the participants about choosing general practice as a career: had they heard negative comments? Had they heard positive comments? Do they think comments influence student career decisions or is it a problem? Could they suggest any solutions to the issue? Results were analysed using thematic analysis.Results Students reported hearing both positive and negative comments about general practice as a career choice. They perceived the comments to potentially influence student career choice. Three underlying themes emerged: the individual (personal characteristics of students affecting the influence that comments have on them); the curriculum (presence and content of general practice teaching); and culture (in the medical school and profession). These were used to postulate a model that may explain how negative comments shape students{\textquoteright} perceptions of general practice.Conclusion Denigration of general practice is an ongoing problem within the medical profession and strategies to address it must be developed or recruitment to the specialty will continue to decline. This study suggests a model that can help to understand the complex relationship between different factors that result in negative comments being taken on board by medical students.}, URL = {https://bjgpopen.org/content/5/1/bjgpopen20X101132}, eprint = {https://bjgpopen.org/content/5/1/bjgpopen20X101132.full.pdf}, journal = {BJGP Open} }