University of California-San Francisco, Internal Medicine, 505 Parnassus Ave., San Francisco, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2012 Apr;74(7):1013-20. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.11.043. Epub 2012 Feb 7.
Although the number of women entering medical school has been steadily rising in the U.S.A., female medical students continue to report instances of sexual harassment and gender discrimination. The full spectrum of such experiences and their effect on the professional identity formation of female students over time remains largely unknown. To investigate these experiences, we interviewed 12 third year female medical students at a private New England medical school over several points during the 2006-2007 academic year. Using theoretical frameworks of gender performance and the centrality of student-patient and student-supervisor relationships, we were better able to understand how female medical students interpret the role of 'woman doctor' and the effect of negative and positive gendered interactions on the evolution of their professional identity. We found that participants quickly learned how to confront and respond to inappropriate behavior from male patients and found interactions with female patients and supervisors particularly rewarding. However, they did not feel equipped to respond to the unprofessional behavior of male supervisors, resulting in feelings of guilt and resignation over time that such events would be a part of their professional identity. The rapid acculturation to unprofessional behavior and resignation described by participants has implications for not only professional identity formation of female students but specialty choices and issues of future physician workforce.
尽管在美国,进入医学院的女性人数一直在稳步上升,但女性医学生仍报告了性骚扰和性别歧视的事件。这些经历的全貌及其对女性学生职业身份形成的长期影响在很大程度上仍然未知。为了调查这些经历,我们在 2006-2007 学年的几个时间点采访了新英格兰一所私立医学院的 12 名三年级女医学生。我们使用性别表现的理论框架和学生-患者和学生-导师关系的中心性,能够更好地理解女性医学生如何解释“女医生”的角色,以及负面和正面性别互动对她们职业身份发展的影响。我们发现,参与者很快学会了如何应对和回应男患者的不当行为,并发现与女患者和导师的互动特别有收获。然而,他们觉得自己没有能力回应男导师的不专业行为,随着时间的推移,他们感到内疚和无奈,认为这些事件将成为他们职业身份的一部分。参与者描述的快速适应不专业行为和无奈,不仅对女性学生的职业身份形成,而且对专业选择和未来医生劳动力问题都有影响。