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  4. When perception is reality: Resident perception of faculty gender parity in a university-based internal medicine residency program.

When perception is reality: Resident perception of faculty gender parity in a university-based internal medicine residency program.

Publication type
journal article
Publication date
2019
Author(s)
Lukela, Jennifer Reilly
Ramakrishnan, Aditi
Hadeed, Nicole
Del Valle, John
Place of publication
Netherlands
Language
English
Keywords

Academic Medical Cent...

Female

Humans

Male

Adult

Gender disparity

Cross-Sectional Studi...

Implicit bias

Sexism/*psychology

Students, Medical/*ps...

Gender Identity

*Internship and Resid...

Faculty, Medical/*sup...

Internal Medicine/*ed...

Medical education-gra...

Perception

Physicians, Women/*su...

Role model

View point(s)
Institutional
Discipline(s)

Health Sciences

Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Although women have entered medical school and internal medicine residency programs in significant numbers for decades, women faculty remain underrepresented in senior and departmental leadership roles. How residents perceive this gender disparity is unknown. We sought to assess resident perception of gender parity among departmental leadership and teaching faculty in our internal medicine department, and to determine the actual gender distribution of those faculty roles. METHODS: An anonymous cross-sectional survey was distributed to evaluate resident perception of gender representation of various faculty roles. Using conference schedules, resident evaluations, and our department website, we determined the actual representation of women faculty in department leadership roles, and in clinical and educational activities. RESULTS: 88 of 164 residents (54%) responded. Women residents were less likely than men to perceive that women faculty were equally represented in department leadership (45% men agreed vs. 13% women, p < 0.05), clinical teaching roles (55% men agreed vs. 28% women, p < 0.05), or facilitating educational conferences (45% men agreed vs. 28% women, p = 0.074). In 2017, the internal medicine department at our institution comprised 815 faculty members, 473 men (58%) and 342 women (42%). At that time, women faculty held 5% of senior departmental leadership positions and 21% of educational leadership positions. During the year preceding survey distribution, women faculty attended on internal medicine inpatient wards for 33% of the total number of weeks, staffed 20% of morning reports, and facilitated 28% of noon conferences. DISCUSSION: Women residents in our internal medicine training program perceived a gender disparity among faculty in leadership and educational positions to a greater extent than male residents. The perception of women trainees was accurate. In addition to disproportionate underrepresentation in leadership positions, women faculty were underrepresented in prominent educational positions, including attending on inpatient services and serving as discussants at educational conferences.
Journal
Perspectives on medical education
ISSN
2212-277X
DOI
10.1007/s40037-019-00532-9
Volume
8
Issue
6
Pagination
346-352
https://libkey.io/libraries/2561/articles/357872849/full-text-file?utm_source=api_2667&allow_speedbump=true
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