Jagsi Reshma, Biga Cathie, Poppas Athena, Rodgers George P, Walsh Mary N, White Patrick J, McKendry Colleen, Sasson Joseph, Schulte Phillip J, Douglas Pamela S
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Cardiovascular Management of Illinois, Woodridge, Illinois.
J Am Coll Cardiol. 2016 Feb 9;67(5):529-41. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2015.10.038. Epub 2015 Nov 8.
Much remains unknown about experiences, including working activities and pay, of women in cardiology, which is a predominantly male specialty.
The goal of this study was to describe the working activities and pay of female cardiologists compared with their male colleagues and to determine whether sex differences in compensation exist after accounting for differences in work activities and other characteristics.
The personal, job, and practice characteristics of a national sample of practicing cardiologists were described according to sex. We applied the Peters-Belson technique and multivariate regression analysis to evaluate whether gender differences in compensation existed after accounting for differences in other measured characteristics. The study used 2013 data reported by practice administrators to MedAxiom, a subscription-based service provider to cardiology practices. Data regarding cardiologists from 161 U.S. practices were included, and the study sample included 2,679 subjects (229 women and 2,450 men).
Women were more likely to be specialized in general/noninvasive cardiology (53.1% vs. 28.2%), and a lower proportion (11.4% vs. 39.3%) reported an interventional subspecialty compared with men. Job characteristics that differed according to sex included the proportion working full-time (79.9% vs. 90.9%; p < 0.001), the mean number of half-days worked (387 vs. 406 days; p = 0.001), and mean work relative value units generated (7,404 vs. 9,497; p < 0.001) for women and men, respectively. Peters-Belson analysis revealed that based on measured job and productivity characteristics, the women in this sample would have been expected to have a mean salary that was $31,749 (95% confidence interval: $16,303 to $48,028) higher than that actually observed. Multivariate analysis confirmed the direction and magnitude of the independent association between sex and salary.
Men and women practicing cardiology in this national sample had different job activities and salaries. Substantial sex-based salary differences existed even after adjusting for measures of personal, job, and practice characteristics.
心脏病学是一个男性占主导的专业领域,关于女性在该领域的经历,包括工作活动和薪酬等方面,仍有许多未知之处。
本研究的目的是描述与男性同事相比,女性心脏病专家的工作活动和薪酬情况,并确定在考虑工作活动和其他特征的差异后,薪酬方面是否存在性别差异。
根据性别描述了全国执业心脏病专家样本的个人、工作和执业特征。我们应用彼得斯 - 贝尔森技术和多变量回归分析来评估在考虑其他测量特征的差异后,薪酬方面是否存在性别差异。该研究使用了实践管理人员向MedAxiom(一家为心脏病学实践提供订阅服务的供应商)报告的2013年数据。纳入了来自美国161个实践机构的心脏病专家数据,研究样本包括2679名受试者(229名女性和2450名男性)。
女性更有可能专门从事普通/非侵入性心脏病学(53.1%对28.2%),与男性相比,报告从事介入性亚专业的比例较低(11.4%对39.3%)。根据性别不同的工作特征包括全职工作的比例(79.9%对90.9%;p<0.001)、平均半天工作天数(387天对406天;p = 0.001)以及女性和男性分别产生的平均工作相对价值单位(7404对9497;p<0.001)。彼得斯 - 贝尔森分析显示,基于所测量的工作和生产力特征,该样本中的女性预计平均薪资会比实际观察到的高出31749美元(95%置信区间:16303美元至48028美元)。多变量分析证实了性别与薪资之间独立关联的方向和程度。
在这个全国样本中,从事心脏病学工作的男性和女性有不同的工作活动和薪资。即使在调整了个人、工作和执业特征的测量指标后,仍存在基于性别的显著薪资差异。