Department of Surgery, University Surgical Cluster, National University Hospital, Singapore; Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
J Surg Res. 2021 Apr;260:200-209. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2020.11.053. Epub 2020 Dec 23.
Female surgeons are highly underrepresented in Asian countries, where prescriptive gender norms are widespread and more deeply embedded in societies.
A nationwide structured questionnaire was completed by 1741 Singaporean third- and fifth-year medical students after the completion of an 8-week general surgery rotation, during 2015-2017. Results were analyzed using mixed-effects hierarchical models which took into account clustering of survey responses under the teaching hospitals which students were posted to and medical students' year of study.
Female medical students had a poorer perception of general surgery than male students (3.22 ± 0.91 versus 3.41 ± 0.89; P < 0.0001) before the clerkship. However, the clerkship improved female students' opinion to a greater extent than male students (+0.84 ± 1.06 versus +0.59 ± 1.03; P < 0.0001), resulting in female and male students having comparable attitudes toward surgery after the clerkship (4.06 ± 0.79 versus 4.00 ± 0.87; P = 0.2435). A total of 40.4% of female students responded that they were inspired to pursue a surgical career after the clerkship, and we identified 13 pedagogical traits of faculty and resident mentors which were associated with female students' career aspirations. Female students were more likely to consider intellectual challenges arising from cases (ratio: 1.045 [95% confidence interval 1.004-1.088, P = 0.0292]) and the presence of role models (ratio: 1.068 [95% confidence interval: 1.020-1.118, P = 0.0048]) as "pull" factors compared with their male contemporaries, but were deterred from a surgical career to a greater extent by eight "push" factors.
A surgical clerkship itself could be regarded as an effective intervention for improving female medical students' enthusiasm for surgery, which may help to address the "pipeline problem" of few female students applying for surgical training after medical school. A greater emphasis on "pull factors" and pedagogical qualities of mentors could be used to improve the clerkship experience, to attract more female students to surgery.
在亚洲国家,女外科医生的比例非常低,而这些国家普遍存在规定性别的规范,并且这些规范在社会中更加根深蒂固。
2015 年至 2017 年期间,在完成了为期 8 周的普通外科轮转后,1741 名新加坡三、五年级医学生填写了全国性的结构化问卷。使用混合效应层次模型分析结果,该模型考虑了学生所在教学医院的调查答复的聚类以及医学生的学习年限。
在实习前,女医学生对普通外科的看法不如男学生(3.22±0.91 与 3.41±0.89;P<0.0001)。然而,实习对女学生的看法的改善程度大于男学生(+0.84±1.06 与 +0.59±1.03;P<0.0001),因此实习后男女学生对手术的态度相当(4.06±0.79 与 4.00±0.87;P=0.2435)。共有 40.4%的女学生表示,实习后她们受到激励,想要从事外科职业。我们确定了 13 种教师和住院医师导师的教学特质,这些特质与女学生的职业志向有关。女学生更有可能考虑到病例带来的智力挑战(比值:1.045[95%置信区间:1.004-1.088,P=0.0292])和榜样的存在(比值:1.068[95%置信区间:1.020-1.118,P=0.0048])作为“拉力”因素,与同期男学生相比,但是更多的“推力”因素阻碍了女学生从事外科职业。
实习本身可以被视为提高女医学生对手术热情的有效干预措施,这可能有助于解决医学院毕业后申请外科培训的女学生人数较少的“管道问题”。更多关注导师的“拉力因素”和教学素质可以用来改善实习经验,吸引更多的女学生从事外科工作。