The average male doctor at these institutions earns at least $50,000
a year more than the average female, researchers found.
A large pay gap remained even after accounting for factors that
influence salary, such as age and medical specialty.
"When you account for those, you can explain about 60 percent of the
gap, but about 40 percent of the gap remains," said lead author Dr.
Anupam Jena, of Harvard Medical School in Boston.
Previous research has found differences in pay between male and
female doctors, but those studies were often based on survey
results.
For the new study, the researcher used data from 24 public medical
schools in 12 U.S. states that require salary information be made
available to the public through freedom of information requirements.
"The states that we looked at had this information online," Jena
told Reuters Health.
Male doctors at those schools earned on average $257,957, compared
to $206,641 among female doctors.
Female doctors who were the top professors at their institution were
making as much as male doctors who held lower positions.
Women were less likely than men to be full professors, to have
funding from the National Institutes of Health and to have conducted
a clinical trial.
They were also more likely to be younger, and to specialize in
internal medicine, obstetrics and gynecology and pediatrics.
After accounting for those factors, women still made nearly $20,000
less, on average, than men, the researchers report in JAMA Internal
Medicine.
"They were still left with that pay gap," said Dr. Vineet Arora, who
wrote an editorial accompanying the new study.
"This study does point to some bright spots that merit further
discussion and understanding," added Arora, who is in the Department
of Medicine at the University of Chicago.
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For example, not every institution had a pay gap. Also, women
working in radiology were paid as much as their colleagues.
"When something is going well some places, we need to figure out why
and that may help poor performers," Arora told Reuters Health.
Jena suggested several possible reasons for the gap. For example, he
said, women negotiate salary differently than men. They may also be
less likely to seek out outside job offers to bolster their current
salary. They may also be the victims of conscious or unconscious
biases.
Arora said the next step is to look at ways to reduce the pay gap
between male and female doctors.
"I think what we need to realize is that women physicians aren’t
alone," she said. "It’s important to understand it. It can help
women in other fields."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/29rZgRS and http://bit.ly/29rZvwb JAMA
Internal Medicine, online July 11, 2016.
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