Abstract

BackgroundPharmacists are a crucial part of the health workforce and play an important role in achieving universal health coverage. In China, pharmaceutical human resources are in short supply, and the distribution is unequal. This study aimed to identify the key job characteristics that influence the job preferences of undergraduate pharmacy students and to elicit the relative importance of different job characteristics to shed light on future policy interventions.MethodsA discrete choice experiment was conducted to assess the job preferences of undergraduate pharmacy students from 6 provinces in mainland China. A face-to-face interview was used to collect data. Conditional logit and mixed logit models were used to analyse data, and the final model was chosen according to the model fit statistics. A series of policy simulations was also conducted.ResultsIn total, 581 respondents completed the questionnaire, and 500 respondents who passed the internal consistency test were analysed. All attributes were statistically significant except for open management. Monthly income and work location were most important to respondents, followed by work unit (which refers to the nature of the workplace) and years to promotion. There was preference heterogeneity among respondents, e.g., male students preferred open management, and female students preferred jobs in public institutions. Furthermore, students with an urban background or from a single-child family placed higher value on a job in the city compared to their counterparts.ConclusionThe heterogeneity of attributes showed the complexity of job preferences. Both monetary and nonmonetary job characteristics significantly influenced the job preferences of pharmacy students in China. A more effective policy intervention to attract graduates to work in rural areas should consider both incentives on the job itself and the background of pharmacy school graduates.

Highlights

  • Pharmacists are a crucial part of the health workforce and play an important role in achieving universal health coverage

  • This study aimed to investigate the relative importance of attributes influencing the job preferences of undergraduate pharmacy students in mainland China

  • A Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) was designed and analysed following the user guide published by the World Health Organization (WHO) [31] and the checklist published by the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR) [32]

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Summary

Introduction

Pharmacists are a crucial part of the health workforce and play an important role in achieving universal health coverage. In China, pharmaceutical human resources are in short supply, and the distribution is unequal. Many countries worldwide are facing a shortage of pharmaceutical human resources and an imbalance of internal distribution, a situation that is occurring. The number of pharmacists in China has increased in recent years, the ratio of doctors, nurses and pharmacists is unbalanced. In 2018, the ratio of doctors, nurses and pharmacists in China was 7.71/8.76/1 [8]. The distribution of pharmacists in rural and urban areas is unequal. In 2018, the number of pharmacists per 10,000 people in urban and rural areas was 4.08 and 2.80, respectively [8, 9]. Less than one-third of pharmacists have a bachelor’s degree, and only 3.4% of them have a graduate degree [8]

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