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  4. Gender Representation Among Major Plastic Surgery Society Achievement Award Recipients
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Gender Representation Among Major Plastic Surgery Society Achievement Award Recipients

Publication type
journal article
Publication date
2024
Author(s)
Ni, Tiffany
Cebron, Urska
Zuo, Kevin J.
Stefaniuk, Stephanie
Snell, Laura
more
Source
PubMed
Language
English
Keywords

gender equity

female

plastic surgery

gender representation...

surgical specialty

Abstract
Purpose: Professional achievement awards are an important factor in recruitment, promotion, and faculty review within academic institutions. Studies have shown that subconscious, gender-based assumptions of individuals and their work in traditionally male-dominated fields lead to more positive evaluations of men than women, a phenomenon present among scientific and medical award committees. This study examined gender representation among recipients of major North American plastic surgery society awards over the last 50 years. Methods: Recipient lists of major achievement awards bestowed by ten American and Canadian plastic surgery societies between 1970 and 2020 were accessed online or by direct contact with the society. Awardee gender, institution affiliation, graduation year, fellowship status, and additional major awards received were recorded. Comparisons were made between gender representation among society presidents, board membership, general society memberships, attending physicians, and plastic surgery residency enrolment. Results: Thirty-two major awards given by ten plastic surgery societies were included. Six hundred and twenty-five awards were conferred, of which 47 recipients were female (7.5%). Of the 121 individuals that received multiple major awards, 8 were female. Two-thirds of female awardees (72%) were clinical plastic surgeons and the remainder were scientists. Over the past 50 years, there has been a gradual increase in the proportion of female award winners. Conclusions: Despite a gradual increase in the proportion of female awardees in major plastic surgery societies, female plastic surgeons remain underrepresented among awardees, with less than 10% of major awards conferred to females.
Journal
Plastic Surgery (Oakville, Ont.)
ISSN
2292-5503
DOI
10.1177/22925503231175483
Volume
32
Issue
4
Pagination
735-742
URL
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/39430261
https://libkey.io/libraries/2561/articles/574977959/full-text-file?utm_source=api_2667&allow_speedbump=true
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