Background: Return-of-service (ROS) agreements require international medical graduates (IMGs) who accept medical residency positions in Canada to practice in specified geographic areas following completion of training. However, few studies have examined how ROS agreements influence career decisions. We examined IMG resident and early-career family physicians’ perceptions of the residency matching process, ROS requirements, and how these factors shaped their early career decisions. Methods: As part of a larger project, we conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with early-career family physicians and family medicine residents in British Columbia, Ontario and Nova Scotia. We asked participants about their actual or intended practice ...
Abstract Background In Canada, graduating medical stu...
Background. Given the looming shortage of physicians in Canada, we wished to determ...
This paper explores the marginalization experienced by International Medical Graduates (IMGs) in the...
Background Return-of-service (ROS) agreements require international medical graduat...
The widely acknowledged doctor shortage in Canada has recently motivated a more critical look at the...
In recent decades, Canada has employed a neoliberal approach to its immigration strategy. Numerous, ...
Over time there has been a steady increase in the number of Canadians studying medicine outside of C...
Background: A growing population of Canadian students are travelling outside of Canada for medical t...
In Canada the number of medical students choosing fam-ily medicine as a career option is declining. ...
Context: The increasing global mobility of physicians and severe physician shortages of many countri...
Canada’s non-discriminatory immigration policy, advanced medical research, ongoing need for doctors,...
Background: A growing population of Canadian students are travelling outside of Canada for medical t...
Background: In North America, there is limited data to support deliberate application strategies for...
OBJECTIVE To compare the demographic and educational characteristics of Canadian international medic...
Admission into Canadian family medicine residency training programs is a competitive process for int...
Abstract Background In Canada, graduating medical stu...
Background. Given the looming shortage of physicians in Canada, we wished to determ...
This paper explores the marginalization experienced by International Medical Graduates (IMGs) in the...
Background Return-of-service (ROS) agreements require international medical graduat...
The widely acknowledged doctor shortage in Canada has recently motivated a more critical look at the...
In recent decades, Canada has employed a neoliberal approach to its immigration strategy. Numerous, ...
Over time there has been a steady increase in the number of Canadians studying medicine outside of C...
Background: A growing population of Canadian students are travelling outside of Canada for medical t...
In Canada the number of medical students choosing fam-ily medicine as a career option is declining. ...
Context: The increasing global mobility of physicians and severe physician shortages of many countri...
Canada’s non-discriminatory immigration policy, advanced medical research, ongoing need for doctors,...
Background: A growing population of Canadian students are travelling outside of Canada for medical t...
Background: In North America, there is limited data to support deliberate application strategies for...
OBJECTIVE To compare the demographic and educational characteristics of Canadian international medic...
Admission into Canadian family medicine residency training programs is a competitive process for int...
Abstract Background In Canada, graduating medical stu...
Background. Given the looming shortage of physicians in Canada, we wished to determ...
This paper explores the marginalization experienced by International Medical Graduates (IMGs) in the...