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Privilege and Medicine

A survey by the British Medical Association reflected a harsh reality of the British medical profession. The council plans to provide the right opportunities to anyone who can be an excellent professional.


The findings prescribed some vivid facts about privilege and medicine in the UK.


1. Underprivileged students are less likely to apply


 In January 2016, an MSC study found that more than 50% of medical applicants were from the wealthiest neighborhoods in the country.


2. Wealthy social groups are overrepresented


3. Students from private schools are overrepresented


Statistics from the Office for Higher Education Statistics state that a quarter of the first-year medical students with a first degree had a private school education. Across the UK, these schools educate only 7% of scholars. From 2007 to 2012, only 1% of all established students failed in medicine.


4. Private school students are less good


Another living fact in the UK is that students who are educated in private and grammar schools perform worse than students from non-selective schools. Such findings are from BMC Medicine's first-year exam results. The research was conducted on 4,811 students at 12 UK medical schools.


5. Doctors from private schools are less likely to become general practitioners


The Center for Health Economics reported in December 2015 that junior doctors from private schools are less likely to choose a general practitioner than doctors from other institutions. Such students with socioeconomic backgrounds seem to have chosen a specialty other than general medicine.

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