Welsh PDP Newsletter Issue 4 4 | Page 7

Enhancing Medical Students’ Employment Prospects in Rural and Remote Wales—Heledd Iago and Judy McKimm ‘Rurality’ is difficult to define, and has considerable international variation with regard to the definition. However, it is attributed in most cases to factors pertaining to population, geography or both. In the healthcare sector, rural settings are often perceived as particularly challenging clinical environments, resulting in a shortage of qualified doctors (and other health professionals) being recruited to and retained in these areas. This is particularly relevant to Wales, with the vast majority of its landmass being classed as rural, and around 1 in 3 of its population living within these rural areas – a figure that is predicted to rise (Wales Centre for Health, 2007). Wales is suffering from a longstanding and ongoing shortage of doctors – now having one of the lowest doctor to patient ratios in Europe. The Wales Deanery is also experiencing one of the lowest application rates from newly graduated doctors to the Foundation programme, indicating that medical school graduates are preferring to live and work elsewhere in the UK. International research indicates that early and immersive exposure to clinical experience in a rural environment may be a contributing factor in the retention of medics to rural areas (e.g. Walker et a