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  4. No Room to "Lean In": A Qualitative Study on Gendered Barriers to Promotion and Leadership.
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No Room to "Lean In": A Qualitative Study on Gendered Barriers to Promotion and Leadership.

Publication type
journal article
Publication date
2019
Author(s)
Ellinas, Elizabeth H.
Kaljo, Kristina
Patitucci, Teresa N.
Novalija, Jutta
Byars-Winston, Angela
more
Place of publication
United States
Language
English
Keywords

Female

Humans

Male

Qualitative Research

Surveys and Questionn...

Mentoring

Job Satisfaction

Women

Leadership

Sexism

Career Mobility

Professorship

Academic Medicine

Medical Faculry

Academic Medical Cent...

Women Physician

View point(s)
Institutional
Discipline(s)

Health Sciences

Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The gender gap in professorship and leadership roles persists in academic medicine, whereas reasons for these disparities remain unclear. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Open-ended text responses to a 2013 faculty engagement survey were analyzed by using the grounded theory and consensual qualitative analysis techniques. The authors grouped 491 faculty's text responses into descriptive codes and three themes: (1) No Obstacles, (2) Barriers to Success, and (3) Concerns Regarding Processes. Demographics of codes were compared by using chi-square analysis. RESULTS: Male faculty identified barriers that included negative views of leadership or leaders. Female faculty, especially those in clinical roles, expressed barriers related to role overload, including that the demands of their current positions prevented advancement or addition of further roles, no matter how desirable further roles may be. Women also shared that considerable self-promotion was required to receive acknowledgement of their work and support by leadership. CONCLUSION: A proposed framework depicts male and female faculty's concerns on a continuum. No Obstacle and Process Concerns were relatively gender neutral, whereas large gender disparities occurred within the Barriers to Success theme. Women's barriers largely revolved around internal obstacles (I can't do any more), and men's barriers largely revolved around external factors (leaders are impeding my progress). Resources are needed to mitigate work overload specifically for female faculty, and to ensure that all faculty are both engaged in advanced career opportunities and encouraged to pursue leadership positions.
Journal
Journal of women's health (2002)
ISSN
1931-843X
DOI
10.1089/jwh.2018.7252
Volume
28
Issue
3
Pagination
393-402
Rights
© 2019, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
https://resolver.ebsco.com/c/t3cw6d/result?genre=article&aulast=Ellinas&issn=1540-9996&title=Journal%20of%20Women's%20Health&atitle=No%20Room%20to%20%E2%80%9CLean%20In%E2%80%9D%3A%20A%20Qualitative%20Study%20on%20Gendered%20Barriers%20to%20Promotion%20and%20Leadership&volume=28&issue=3&spage=393&epage=402&date=2019-03-01&doi=10.1089%2Fjwh.2018.7252&sid=LibKey
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