Suppr超能文献

识别建立多元化医师队伍的障碍:对 ACR 会员的全国性调查。

Identifying Barriers to Building a Diverse Physician Workforce: A National Survey of the ACR Membership.

机构信息

Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Commission for Women and Diversity, American College of Radiology, Reston, Virginia.

Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.

出版信息

J Am Coll Radiol. 2019 Aug;16(8):1091-1101. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2019.05.008. Epub 2019 Jun 4.

Abstract

PURPOSE

The aim of this study was to identify potential barriers to building a diverse workforce in radiology and radiation oncology by conducting a national survey of physicians in these fields and studying their reported career experiences.

METHODS

An electronic survey of ACR members (February 27, 2018, to April 26, 2018) was conducted in which physicians' attitudes about their work environment, relationships, and culture were queried. The aim was to determine if responses differed by gender or race/ethnicity. In total, 900 invitations were issued; women were oversampled with the goal of equal representation. Descriptive summaries (proportions of yes or no responses) were calculated per item, per subgroup of interest. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify significant associations between gender- and item-specific responses; it was not used in the race/ethnicity analysis because of the small sizes of many subgroups.

RESULTS

The response rate was 51.2% (461 of 900). In total, 51.0% of respondents identified as women (235 of 461); the 9.5% (44 of 461) who identified as black or African American, Hispanic, or American Indian or Alaska Native were considered underrepresented minorities. Respondents' mean age was 40.2 ± 10.4 years. Subgroups varied most in their reporting of unfair or disrespectful treatment. Women were significantly more likely than men to report such treatment attributable to gender (50.6% versus 5.4%; odds ratio, 18.00; 95% confidence interval, 9.29-34.86; P < .001), and 27.9% of underrepresented minorities compared with 2.6% of white non-Hispanic respondents reported such treatment attributable to race/ethnicity.

CONCLUSIONS

Women and underrepresented minorities disproportionately experience unfair or disrespectful treatment in the workplace. Addressing this problem is likely to be critically important for improving workforce diversity.

摘要

目的

本研究旨在通过对从事放射学和放射肿瘤学的医生进行全国性调查,并研究他们的职业经历,来确定在放射科和放射肿瘤学界建立多元化劳动力队伍所面临的潜在障碍。

方法

于 2018 年 2 月 27 日至 2018 年 4 月 26 日对 ACR 成员进行了一项电子调查,调查中询问了医生对其工作环境、人际关系和文化的态度。目的是确定他们的反应是否因性别或种族/民族而异。共发出 900 份邀请;对女性进行了超额抽样,目标是实现平等代表权。根据每个项目和每个感兴趣的亚组计算了每个项目的描述性摘要(是或否的比例)。使用逻辑回归分析确定了性别和项目特异性反应之间的显著关联;由于许多亚组的规模较小,因此未在种族/民族分析中使用。

结果

回复率为 51.2%(461 份中的 461 份)。共有 51.0%的受访者为女性(461 名中的 235 名);9.5%(461 名中的 44 名)认为自己是黑人或非裔美国人、西班牙裔或美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民,被认为是代表性不足的少数族裔。受访者的平均年龄为 40.2±10.4 岁。亚组之间在报告不公平或不尊重的待遇方面差异最大。与男性相比,女性更有可能报告因性别而受到这种待遇(50.6%对 5.4%;优势比,18.00;95%置信区间,9.29-34.86;P<.001),而 27.9%的代表性不足的少数族裔受访者比 2.6%的白人非西班牙裔受访者报告因种族/民族而受到这种待遇。

结论

女性和代表性不足的少数族裔在工作场所受到不公平或不尊重的待遇的比例过高。解决这个问题对于提高劳动力多样性可能至关重要。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验