Guptill Mindi, Reibling Ellen T, Clem Kathleen
Department of Emergency Medicine, Loma Linda University School of Medicine, 11234 Anderson St., MC A108, Loma Linda, CA, 92354, USA.
University of Central Florida College of Medicine, Orlando, FL, USA.
Int J Emerg Med. 2018 Nov 16;11(1):47. doi: 10.1186/s12245-018-0206-7.
The aim of this study is to highlight career paths of senior women leaders in academic emergency medicine (EM) to encourage younger women to pursue leadership.
This was a qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with female EM leaders. We interviewed 22 recognized female leaders selected using criterion-based sampling and a standardized script of open-ended questions derived from the Intelligent Career Model. Questions were related to job purpose, skills, and networking. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and three trained reviewers analyzed transcripts following grounded theory principles and using Dedoose®. Researchers used an iterative process over several meetings to produce the final set of codes and themes.
Our iterative process identified four themes: women leaders made an intentional decision to pursue opportunities to influence emergency medicine, women sought out natural mentors and sponsors to facilitate career development, women leaders intentionally planned their out of work life to support their leadership role, and an important focus for their work was to help others achieve excellence.
Our study provides insights from senior female leaders in EM; supporting the value of women pursuing leadership. There is a widely acknowledged need to diversify leadership and support gender-specific needs to develop women leaders in medicine. Becoming a woman leader in EM means making intentional decisions and taking risks. Leaders found benefits in natural mentors and sponsors. Those relationships have power to change the trajectory of emerging women leaders by identifying and reinforcing potential. Work/life balance remains an area which requires intentional planning. Woman leaders encourage succession planning and corroborate the need for increasing the percentage of women leaders to benefit the organizational culture. Leadership in academic medicine is changing with reorientation of a largely autocratic, vertically oriented hierarchy into a more democratic, consensus-driven, and horizontally organized management structure which should complement the strengths women bring to the leadership table.
本研究旨在突出学术急诊医学(EM)领域资深女性领导者的职业发展路径,以鼓励年轻女性追求领导职位。
这是一项定性研究,采用对急诊医学女性领导者的半结构化访谈。我们采访了22位公认的女性领导者,她们是通过基于标准的抽样方法选取的,并使用了源自智能职业模型的开放式问题标准化脚本。问题涉及工作目的、技能和人际关系网络。访谈逐字记录,三名经过培训的评审人员按照扎根理论原则并使用Dedoose®软件对记录进行分析。研究人员通过多次会议的迭代过程得出最终的代码和主题集。
我们的迭代过程确定了四个主题:女性领导者有意决定寻求影响急诊医学的机会;女性寻找自然导师和支持者以促进职业发展;女性领导者有意规划其工作之外的生活以支持其领导角色;她们工作的一个重要重点是帮助他人追求卓越。
我们的研究提供了急诊医学领域资深女性领导者的见解,支持女性追求领导职位的价值。人们普遍认识到需要使领导层多元化,并支持满足特定性别的需求以培养医学领域的女性领导者。成为急诊医学领域的女性领导者意味着要做出有意的决定并承担风险。领导者们发现自然导师和支持者带来了益处。这些关系有能力通过识别和强化潜力来改变新兴女性领导者的轨迹。工作与生活的平衡仍是一个需要有意规划的领域。女性领导者鼓励继任规划,并证实增加女性领导者比例对组织文化有益的必要性。学术医学领域的领导力正在发生变化,从一个主要是专制、垂直导向的等级制度重新定位为一个更加民主、共识驱动和横向组织的管理结构,这应该补充女性在领导岗位上所具备的优势。