Foster S W, McMurray J E, Linzer M, Leavitt J W, Rosenberg M, Carnes M
Department of Pediatrics, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, USA.
Acad Med. 2000 Jun;75(6):653-60. doi: 10.1097/00001888-200006000-00019.
AND CLIMATE determine how faculty's perceptions of medical school gender climate differ by gender, track, rank, and departmental affiliation.
In 1997, a 115-item questionnaire was sent to all University of Wisconsin Medical School faculty to assess their perceptions of mentoring, networking, professional environment, obstacles to a successful academic career, and reasons for considering leaving academic medicine. Using Fisher's exact two-tailed test, the authors assessed gender differences both overall and by track, rank, and departmental cluster.
Of the 836 faculty on tenure, clinician-educator, and clinical tracks, 507 (61%) responded. Although equal proportions of men and women had mentors, 24% of the women (compared with 6% of men; p < .001) felt that informal networking excluded faculty based on gender. Women's and men's perceptions differed significantly (p < .001) on 12 of 16 professional environment items (p < .05 on two of these items) and on five of six items regarding obstacles to academic success. While similar percentages of women and men indicated having seriously considered leaving academic medicine, their reasons differed: women cited work-family conflicts (51%), while men cited uncompetitive salaries (59%). These gender differences generally persisted across tracks, ranks, and departmental clusters. The greatest gender differences occurred among clinician-educators, associate professors, and primary care faculty.
Women faculty perceived that gender climate created specific, serious obstacles to their professional development. Many of those obstacles (e.g., inconvenient meeting times and lack of child care) are remediable. These data suggest that medical schools can improve the climate and retain and promote women by more inclusive networking, attention to meeting times and child care, and improved professional interactions between men and women faculty.
研究性别与气候如何影响医学院教员对性别氛围的认知,具体差异体现在性别、职业轨迹、职级和部门归属等方面。
1997年,向威斯康星大学医学院全体教员发放了一份包含115个条目的问卷,以评估他们对指导、社交网络、职业环境、学术职业成功的障碍以及考虑离开学术医学领域的原因的看法。作者使用费舍尔精确双侧检验,总体以及按职业轨迹、职级和部门类别评估性别差异。
在836名终身制、临床教育工作者和临床轨迹的教员中,507人(61%)回复了问卷。尽管男女拥有导师的比例相同,但24%的女性(相比之下男性为6%;p <.001)认为非正式社交网络存在基于性别的排斥。在16项职业环境项目中的12项上,男女的认知存在显著差异(其中两项p <.05),在关于学术成功障碍的6项中的5项上也是如此。虽然表示认真考虑过离开学术医学领域的男女比例相似,但原因不同:女性提及工作与家庭冲突(51%),而男性提及薪资缺乏竞争力(59%)。这些性别差异在职业轨迹、职级和部门类别中普遍存在。最大的性别差异出现在临床教育工作者、副教授和初级保健教员中。
女性教员认为性别氛围给她们的职业发展带来了特定且严重的障碍。其中许多障碍(如会议时间不便和缺乏儿童保育服务)是可以补救的。这些数据表明,医学院可以通过更具包容性的社交网络、关注会议时间和儿童保育服务以及改善男女教员之间的职业互动来改善氛围,留住并晋升女性教员。