Career Advancement Among Women Physicians in Nine Academic Medicine Specialties

被引:8
作者
Lee, Moon O. O. [1 ]
Flores, Brenda [2 ]
Fassiotto, Magali [2 ]
Hobgood, Cherri [3 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Dept Emergency Med, 900 Welch Rd,Suite 350,Mailcode 5119, Stanford, CA 94304 USA
[2] Stanford Univ, Off Fac Dev & Divers, Sch Med, Stanford, CA 94304 USA
[3] Indiana Univ, Sch Med, Dept Emergency Med, Indianapolis, IN USA
关键词
career mobility; academic medical centers; gender equity; graduate medical education; Rank Equity Index; academic medicine; promotion; SEX-DIFFERENCES; PROMOTION; FACULTY; SCHOOLS; PARITY; GENDER; RANK;
D O I
10.1089/jwh.2022.0464
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Objective: Gender parity lags in academic medicine. We applied the Rank Equity Index (REI) to compare the longitudinal progress of women's academic medicine careers. We hypothesized that women have different rank parity in promotion by specialty based on the proportion of women in the specialty.Method: Aggregate data by sex for medical students, residents, assistant professors, associate professors, and professors in nine specialties were obtained from the Association of American Medical Colleges for 2019-2020. Specialties were clustered into terciles based on the proportion of women in the field: upper (obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics, psychiatry), middle (internal medicine, emergency medicine, anesthesia), and lower (surgery, urology, and orthopedic surgery). We calculated the percentage representation by sex by specialty and rank to calculate REI. Specialty-specific REI comparisons between each rank were performed to assess parity in advancement.Results: Only specialties in the upper tercile recruited proportionally more women medical students to residency training. All specialties advanced women for the resident-to-assistant professor with psychiatry, internal medicine, emergency medicine, anesthesia, urology, and orthopedic surgery that promoted women faculty at rates above parity. No specialty demonstrated parity in advancement based on sex for the assistant professor-to-associate professor or associate professor-to-professor transitions.Conclusion: Gender inequity in advancement is evident in academic medicine starting at the assistant professor-to-associate professor stage, regardless of overall proportion of women in the specialty. This suggests a common set of barriers to career advancement of women faculty in academic medicine that must be addressed starting at the early career stage.
引用
收藏
页码:1073 / 1079
页数:7
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]  
Ascend, 2022, WHAT AR EX PART IND
[2]  
Association of American Medical Colleges, 2019, TABL B3 NUMB ACT RES
[3]  
Association of American Medical Colleges, 2022, TOT US MD GRANT MED
[4]  
Association of American Medical Colleges, 2019, TABL 13 US MED SCH F
[5]  
Association of American Medical Colleges, TABL C6 PHYS RET STA
[6]  
Association of American Medical Colleges, 2019, ACT PHYS SEX SPEC
[7]   Mentorship Is Not Enough: Exploring Sponsorship and Its Role in Career Advancement in Academic Medicine [J].
Ayyala, Manasa S. ;
Skarupski, Kimberly ;
Bodurtha, Joann N. ;
Gonzalez-Fernandez, Marlis ;
Ishii, Lisa E. ;
Fivush, Barbara ;
Levine, Rachel B. .
ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2019, 94 (01) :94-100
[8]   The Women in Medicine and Health Science Program: An Innovative Initiative to Support Female Faculty at the University of California Davis School of Medicine [J].
Bauman, Melissa D. ;
Howell, Lydia P. ;
Villablanca, Amparo C. .
ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2014, 89 (11) :1462-1466
[9]   Two decades of little change: An analysis of US medical school basic science faculty by sex, race/ethnicity, and academic rank [J].
Bennett, Christopher L. ;
Salinas, Raquel Y. ;
Locascio, Joseph J. ;
Boyer, Edward W. .
PLOS ONE, 2020, 15 (07)
[10]   How, When, and Why Do Physicians Choose Careers in Academic Medicine? A Literature Review [J].
Borges, Nicole J. ;
Navarro, Anita M. ;
Grover, Amelia ;
Hoban, J. Dennis .
ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2010, 85 (04) :680-686