Anecdotally, many of the people I interact with in medical school are driven by altruistic motives and financial considerations (and other factors - e.g. intellectual interest and so forth)
I fail to see how altruism, by its definition, is applicable to someone who claims to be selfless and therefore altruistic, and yet is concerned (and still not satisfied as per SWSydneyTutor's criticism) with financial reward of the kind that is only offered in the medical profession (as opposed to, say the nursing profession). I can understand the basic need for monetary remuneration (absolutely nothing wrong with that) but if that was the only concern, then surely nursing would also offer altruistic and basic monetary opportunities. But as I mentioned earlier, I have never met a single med student or med-student-hopeful who would be happy to consider nursing as an alternative career, they wouldn't be caught dead as a nurse. I'm not even referring to the public/private remuneration debate in the med community.. if it was truly altruistic, surely it wouldn't matter, the public sector already offers more than adequate remuneration as it is.
I can see how one could be driven by altruistic motives
and intellectual interest, but altruism and financial rewards of the kind afforded by the medical profession... again, a crude test of true altruism is whether these same medical students would be just as happy to work as a nurse in the nursing profession if their med careers hadn't worked out.
The results may well reflect reality, albeit in an imperfect manner. The AMWAC report aimed to understand movements in the health workforce in order to guide policy, not to self-glorify the profession.
It's not reality from an independent perspective, there is no independent comparison/analysis, a control so to speak. The basic question that that survey asks is:
"How do you medical students view yourselves and the choices you yourselves make?". It's a wholly subjective perspective, not an objective assessment.
You could quite easily send a similarly structured survey to the staff at Guantanamo Bay and ask:
"How do you view yourselves in your job and the choices you make?". I guarantee the results would show that most of the staff there will justify their work there as "protecting freedoms" and other perceived altruistic justifications. You may say the results of
this survey reflects reality, but it's reality from their perspective, however twisted and non-reflective of reality it may be.