Odell Tiffany, Toor Harjyot, Takayanagi Ariel, Zampella Bailey, Siddiqi Javed, Jalal Sabeena, Golbaz Khashayar, Qamar Sadia, Khosa Faisal
Neurosurgery, Desert Regional Medical Center, Palm Springs, USA.
Neurosurgery, Riverside University Health System Medical Center, Moreno Valley, USA.
Cureus. 2019 May 9;11(5):e4628. doi: 10.7759/cureus.4628.
Background In the 1960s, less than 10% of medical school graduates were women. Today, almost half of all medical school graduates are women. Despite the significant rise in female medical school graduates, there continues to be a large gender gap in most subspecialties, particularly surgical subspecialties such as neurosurgery. Objective The purpose of our study was to assess the factors contributing to differences in the academic ranks of male and female staff in academic neurosurgery programs in Canada and the United States (US). Methods Data about women in academic neurosurgery was collected from a number of sources, including Fellowship and Residency Electronic Interactive Database (FREIDA), Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), Canadian Resident Matching Service (CaRMS) FRIEDA, ACGME, CaRMS, Pubmed, and Scopus, to create a database of all neurosurgeons in the US and Canada. The analysis included neurosurgeons in academic and leadership ranks and also the H index, citations, publications, citations per year, and publications per year. Results Women represent only 12% of neurosurgeons in the US and Canada. When gender is further analyzed by academic appointment, women represent just over 12% of neurosurgeons at the assistant and associate professor levels (15.44% and 13.27%, respectively) but significantly less at the full professor level (5.84%). Likewise, only 7.45% of women hold first-in command leadership positions while 4.69% hold second-in-command positions within their institutions. Conclusions The existing data shows that women are significantly under-represented in academic neurosurgery. Lack of role models, experience, limited scientific output, and aspirations of a controlled lifestyle could be the potential contributing factors.
在20世纪60年代,医学院毕业生中女性比例不到10%。如今,医学院毕业生中近一半是女性。尽管医学院女性毕业生数量显著增加,但在大多数学科专业,尤其是神经外科等外科专业领域,性别差距仍然很大。
我们研究的目的是评估导致加拿大和美国学术神经外科项目中男女员工学术职级差异的因素。
从多个来源收集有关学术神经外科领域女性的数据,包括住院医师和专科医师电子互动数据库(FREIDA)、毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)、加拿大住院医师匹配服务(CaRMS)、FRIEDA、ACGME、CaRMS、PubMed和Scopus,以创建美国和加拿大所有神经外科医生的数据库。分析包括处于学术和领导职级的神经外科医生,以及H指数、引用次数、出版物数量、每年引用次数和每年出版物数量。
在美国和加拿大,女性神经外科医生仅占12%。按学术职位进一步分析性别时,女性在助理教授和副教授级别神经外科医生中仅略高于12%(分别为15.44%和13.27%),但在正教授级别显著更低(5.84%)。同样,只有7.45%的女性在其所在机构担任一把手领导职位,4.69%担任二把手职位。
现有数据表明,女性在学术神经外科领域的代表性严重不足。缺乏榜样、经验、有限的科研产出以及对可控生活方式的追求可能是潜在的影响因素。