PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Idaira Rodriguez Santana AU - Martin Chalkley TI - Getting the right balance? A mixed logit analysis of the relationship between UK training doctors’ characteristics and their specialties using the 2013 National Training Survey AID - 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-015219 DP - 2017 Aug 01 TA - BMJ Open PG - e015219 VI - 7 IP - 8 4099 - http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/7/8/e015219.short 4100 - http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/7/8/e015219.full SO - BMJ Open2017 Aug 01; 7 AB - Objective To analyse how training doctors’ demographic and socioeconomic characteristics vary according to the specialty that they are training for.Design Descriptive statistics and mixed logistic regression analysis of cross-sectional survey data to quantify evidence of systematic relationships between doctors’ characteristics and their specialty.Setting Doctors in training in the United Kingdom in 2013.Participants 27 530 doctors in training but not in their foundation year who responded to the National Training Survey 2013.Main outcome measures Mixed logit regression estimates and the corresponding odds ratios (calculated separately for all doctors in training and a subsample comprising those educated in the UK), relating gender, age, ethnicity, place of studies, socioeconomic background and parental education to the probability of training for a particular specialty.Results Being female and being white British increase the chances of being in general practice with respect to any other specialty, while coming from a better-off socioeconomic background and having parents with tertiary education have the opposite effect. Mixed results are found for age and place of studies. For example, the difference between men and women is greatest for surgical specialties for which a man is 12.121 times more likely to be training to a surgical specialty (relative to general practice) than a woman (p-value<0.01). Doctors who attended an independent school which is proxy for doctor’s socioeconomic background are 1.789 and 1.413 times more likely to be training for surgical or medical specialties (relative to general practice) than those who attended a state school (p-value<0.01).Conclusions There are systematic and substantial differences between specialties in respect of training doctors’ gender, ethnicity, age and socioeconomic background. The persistent underrepresentation in some specialties of women, minority ethnic groups and of those coming from disadvantaged backgrounds will impact on the representativeness of the profession into the future. Further research is needed to understand how the processes of selection and the self-selection of applicants into specialties gives rise to these observed differences.