Crowe S B, Kairn T
Cancer Care Services, Royal Brisbane & Women's Hospital, Brisbane, Australia.
Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.
Australas Phys Eng Sci Med. 2016 Jun;39(2):525-32. doi: 10.1007/s13246-016-0428-z. Epub 2016 Feb 18.
Although the participation of women within the science, technology, engineering and mathematics workforces has been widely discussed over recent decades, the recording and analysis of data pertaining to the gender balance of medical physicists in Australia and New Zealand remains rare. This study aimed to provide a baseline for evaluating future changes in workforce demographics by quantifying the current level of representation of women in the Australasian medical physics workforce and providing an indication of the relative contribution made by those women to the local research environment. The 2015 Australasian College of Physical Scientists and Engineers in Medicine (ACPSEM) member directory and list of chief physicists at ACPSEM-accredited radiation oncology and diagnostic imaging training centres were interrogated to identify the gender balance of medical physicists working in Australia and New Zealand. A specific investigation of the employment levels of all medical physicists in Queensland was undertaken to provide an example of the gender balance at different levels of seniority in one large Australian state. Lists of authors of medical physics presentations at ACPSEM annual conferences and authors of publications in the ACPSEM's official journal, were used to provide an indication of the gender balance in published research within Australia and New Zealand. The results of this study showed that women currently constitute approximately 28 % of the medical physics workforce in Australia and New Zealand, distributed disproportionally in junior roles; there is a decrease in female participation in the field with increasing levels of seniority, which is particularly apparent in the stratified data obtained for the Queensland workforce. Comparisons with older data suggest that this situation has changed little since 2008. Examination of ACPSEM conference presentations suggested that there are similar disparities between the gender-balance of proffered and invited or keynote speakers (28 % and 13 % from female authors) and the gender balance of certified and chief physicists (28 % and 21 % female). The representation of women in the ACPSEM journal does not differ substantially between authorship of proffered versus invited work (22 % and 19 % from female authors). While this work was limited to evaluating the membership, annual conference and official journal of the ACPSEM (rather than evaluating the entire medical physics workforce and the contributions of male and female physicists to international conferences and publications), this study nonetheless led to the following recommendations: that a longitudinal study analysing correlations between age, period of service, seniority and gender should be undertaken and that future ACPSEM workforce surveys should include analyses of gender representation.
尽管近几十年来女性在科学、技术、工程和数学领域劳动力中的参与情况已得到广泛讨论,但关于澳大利亚和新西兰医学物理学家性别平衡的数据记录与分析仍然少见。本研究旨在通过量化澳大利亚和新西兰医学物理领域女性目前的代表性水平,并表明这些女性对当地研究环境的相对贡献,为评估未来劳动力人口结构的变化提供一个基线。对2015年澳大利亚和新西兰物理科学家与医学工程师学院(ACPSEM)成员名录以及ACPSEM认可的放射肿瘤学和诊断成像培训中心的首席物理学家名单进行了查询,以确定在澳大利亚和新西兰工作的医学物理学家的性别平衡情况。对昆士兰州所有医学物理学家的就业水平进行了一项具体调查,以举例说明澳大利亚一个大州不同资历水平的性别平衡情况。利用在ACPSEM年会上发表的医学物理报告的作者名单以及ACPSEM官方期刊上发表文章的作者名单,来表明澳大利亚和新西兰已发表研究中的性别平衡情况。本研究结果表明,目前女性约占澳大利亚和新西兰医学物理领域劳动力的28%,且在初级职位中的分布不均衡;随着资历水平的提高,女性在该领域的参与度有所下降,这在昆士兰州劳动力的分层数据中尤为明显。与旧数据的比较表明,自2008年以来这种情况变化不大。对ACPSEM会议报告的审查表明,在自荐发言者与受邀或主旨发言者的性别平衡(女性作者分别为28%和13%)以及注册物理学家与首席物理学家的性别平衡(女性分别为28%和21%)之间存在类似差异。在ACPSEM期刊中,女性在自荐作品与受邀作品的作者中所占比例没有实质性差异(女性作者分别为22%和19%)。虽然这项工作仅限于评估ACPSEM的成员、年会和官方期刊(而非评估整个医学物理领域劳动力以及男性和女性物理学家对国际会议和出版物的贡献),但本研究还是得出了以下建议:应开展一项纵向研究,分析年龄、服务年限、资历和性别的相关性,并且未来的ACPSEM劳动力调查应包括对性别代表性的分析。