Levine Cancer Institute at Atrium Health, Charlotte, North Carolina (Drs. Brown, Drury, Naumann, and Mr. Raub).
Levine Cancer Institute at Atrium Health, Charlotte, North Carolina (Drs. Brown, Drury, Naumann, and Mr. Raub).
J Minim Invasive Gynecol. 2019 Jul-Aug;26(5):838-846. doi: 10.1016/j.jmig.2019.03.004. Epub 2019 Mar 13.
To characterize workplace and sexual harassment and discrimination among physicians in gynecology.
A beta-tested Internet survey was distributed by e-mail using the REDCap platform. All responses were anonymous.
The survey was distributed to the 7026 physician members of an international gynecologic society (AAGL), including faculty and trainees.
Not applicable.
The survey was distributed on 3 occasions between July and September 2018. The survey contained questions on demographics, attitudes, experiences, and sequelae regarding harassment and discrimination in the workplace. Frequency distributions and nonparametric tests were performed to determine the percentages and types of harassment and discrimination among respondents.
A total of 907 physicians responded, including 603 US physicians and 304 non-US physicians; 59% identified as female and 40% as male, and 20% were trainees. Females were more likely than males to think the #MeToo movement was "justified and overdue" (p < .05), independent of age or trainee status. More females than males reported experiencing workplace discrimination (67% vs 39%; p < .001); gender-based discrimination was the most common basis for both. Females indicated decreased self-confidence and lower salary; males indicated fewer employment opportunities and lower patient volume. Harassment was reported by more females than males (53% vs 17%; p < .001), including sexual harassment (39% vs 11%, p <.05). Most experienced loss of self-confidence, felt the offender was in a position of power, and did not report the incident, often due to fear of reprisal. Multiple respondents experienced workplace-related sexual assault.
Workplace harassment and discrimination are commonly experienced by female and male gynecologists and are usually related to a power differential. Improvements must be made in the workplace environment to achieve equity and a safe workplace free of harassment and discrimination.
描述妇科医生的工作场所骚扰和歧视现象。
通过 REDCap 平台以电子邮件形式分发经过测试的互联网调查问卷。所有回复均为匿名。
该调查分发给国际妇科协会(AAGL)的 7026 名医师会员,包括教员和学员。
不适用。
该调查于 2018 年 7 月至 9 月期间分 3 次分发。该调查包含有关骚扰和歧视在工作场所的态度、经历和后果的问题。通过频率分布和非参数检验确定受访者中骚扰和歧视的百分比和类型。
共有 907 名医生做出回应,其中 603 名来自美国,304 名来自美国以外的国家;59%为女性,40%为男性,20%为学员。女性比男性更倾向于认为“#MeToo”运动是“合理且适时的”(p<.05),这与年龄或学员身份无关。与男性相比,更多女性报告经历过工作场所歧视(67%比 39%;p<.001);两者都是以性别为基础的歧视。女性表示自信心下降和薪资降低;男性表示就业机会减少和患者量下降。与男性相比,更多女性报告遭受骚扰(53%比 17%;p<.001),包括性骚扰(39%比 11%,p<.05)。大多数经历者都失去了自信心,认为骚扰者处于权力地位,且由于担心报复而未报告该事件。多名受访者经历了与工作场所相关的性侵犯。
妇科医生的工作场所骚扰和歧视现象在女性和男性中都很常见,且通常与权力差异有关。必须改善工作环境,以实现公平和没有骚扰及歧视的安全工作场所。