Researchers sent surveys to roughly 720 students at Harvard Medical
School. Among the 261 who responded, similar proportions of both
genders intended to become surgeons- roughly one in four men and one
in five women.
Roughly similar proportions of men and women - about 61% and 65%,
respectively - said someone had spoken to them to try to dissuade
them from a career in surgery, especially if they planned to raise a
family.
But 72.7% of women believed the verbal discouragement was related to
their gender and their desire for a family, compared to 1.5% of the
men, researchers report in Annals of Surgery. And 29% of women
reported age-based discouragement, compared to 1.5% of the men.
"Despite an equal number of men and women in medical school, fewer
than 25% of surgeons are women," study coauthor Dr. Faith Robertson,
a neurosurgery resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, told
Reuters Health by email. "Our study was important to understand why
gender ratios change between medical school and practice."
Students generally decide which field to enter during the latter
half of medical school, as they complete medical and surgical
rotations and speak to peers, mentors and family members, the study
authors note.
"Discouragement from faculty at the pre-med and student-level
definitely has an impact," study coauthor Dr. Susan Pories of
Harvard Medical School in Boston told Reuters Health by email.
Pories chairs the American College of Surgeons Women in Surgery
Committee and is past president of the Association of Women
Surgeons.
Dr. Carmen Fong, a colorectal surgeon at the Mount Sinai Health
System in New York City, told Reuters Health that during her surgery
rotation in medical school, "we had zero female surgeons, and this
was at a relatively large hospital in a state capital. There were
plenty of women in primary care, but I wanted a female surgeon who
had made it, who could tell me that I could balance a life and an
academic surgical career."
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Dr. Rachel Levine, Associate Vice Chair for Women's Academic Careers
in the Department of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine, points out that stereotypes also contribute to
gender-based discouragement directed at women.
"We think of men as strong, decisive, risk-taking -- traits more
often associated with surgeons. We often think of women as nurturing
and helpful," Levine, who was not a part of the study, told Reuters
Health. "It's sometimes challenging to see a woman as a surgeon
because she doesn't fit these typical traits."
The authors say their study at a private, urban institution may not
reflect the situation at other universities, but they believe it
calls for systemic change, including policies about maternity and
paternity leave.
"We have to work towards equal pay, leadership roles for women and
parental leave policies for men and women," said Pories.
Robertson said the field of surgery has unique demands but also an
"abundance" of unique rewards.
"We owe it to medical students to empower them to pursue fields
based on their passions, and to patients to have a body of surgeons
that reflects population diversity," she said. "By discouraging
individuals, particularly minorities, from entering the field, we do
both a disservice."
"The reality is women are successful in all surgical specialties
(while still) achieving work-life balance," Pories said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2QBgBMn Annals of Surgery, online October 9,
2019.
(Reporting by Vishwadha Chander)
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