Trinh Lily N, O'Rorke Erin, Mulcahey Mary K
Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana.
Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine, Washington State University, Spokane, Washington.
J Surg Educ. 2021 May-Jun;78(3):836-849. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2020.08.050. Epub 2020 Sep 12.
Gender inequality within the medical field continues to be a prominent issue, particularly for surgical specialties. The purpose of this systematic review was to evaluate the factors that influence female medical students' decision to pursue a career in surgery, including general surgery and surgical subspecialties.
A literature search was conducted by 2 independent researchers searching PubMed, Embase, Medline, Web of Science, and Science Direct databases, in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. Keywords included "female," "medical students," "surgery," "gender," "career," "surgical subspecialty," "plastic surgery," "otolaryngology," "neurosurgery," "orthopedics," and "urology." Studies evaluating factors that influenced female medical students' decision to pursuing surgical specialties were identified.
The initial search identified 2200 articles. Five hundred twenty-seven duplicates were removed, and 1993 studies were eliminated based on inclusion and exclusion criteria. Sixty-one articles underwent full-text review. Twenty-six additional studies were identified from references. A total of 14 articles were included in the review. Female medical students were positively influenced by mentorship, intellectual challenge, the rewarding nature of surgery, and specialty exposure. Gender discrimination, surgical lifestyle, and societal and cultural barriers were deterrents for female medical students. Compared to male, females minimized the importance of prestige and expected financial rewards.
This systematic review identifies mentorship, specialty exposure, nature of the surgical field, gender discrimination, and personal factors to be major determinants in female medical students' decisions to pursue a career in surgery. While factors such as inherent interest in surgery may not be easily modified, improvements in gender discrimination, access to mentorship, and specialty exposure can attract more female trainees to surgical specialties. Specifically, improving parental leave policies, reducing pregnancy-related stigma, eliminating gender-discrimination, matching medical students with role models early, and implementing outreach programs designed for women may increase students' interest in a surgical career.
医学领域的性别不平等仍然是一个突出问题,尤其是在外科专业中。本系统评价的目的是评估影响女医学生选择外科职业的因素,包括普通外科和外科亚专业。
由两名独立研究人员按照系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目指南,检索PubMed、Embase、Medline、Web of Science和ScienceDirect数据库。关键词包括“女性”“医学生”“外科”“性别”“职业”“外科亚专业”“整形外科”“耳鼻喉科”“神经外科”“骨科”和“泌尿外科”。确定评估影响女医学生选择外科专业的因素的研究。
初步检索到2200篇文章。去除527篇重复文章,并根据纳入和排除标准排除1993项研究。61篇文章进行了全文审查。从参考文献中又确定了26项研究。本评价共纳入14篇文章。女医学生受到导师指导、智力挑战、外科工作的回报性质和专业接触的积极影响。性别歧视、外科工作方式以及社会和文化障碍对女医学生起到了阻碍作用。与男性相比,女性将声望和预期经济回报的重要性降至最低。
本系统评价确定导师指导、专业接触、外科领域的性质、性别歧视和个人因素是女医学生选择外科职业的主要决定因素。虽然诸如对手术的内在兴趣等因素可能不易改变,但改善性别歧视、获得导师指导的机会和专业接触情况可以吸引更多女性学员投身外科专业。具体而言,改善育儿假政策、减少与怀孕相关的污名、消除性别歧视、尽早为医学生匹配榜样以及实施针对女性的外展项目,可能会增加学生对外科职业的兴趣。