Tufts University School of Medicine, 145 Harrison Ave, Boston, MA, USA.
Gender Equity Initiative in Global Surgery, 641 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA, USA.
World J Surg. 2021 May;45(5):1409-1422. doi: 10.1007/s00268-021-05974-z. Epub 2021 Feb 11.
In addition to systemic gender disparities, women in surgery encounter interpersonal microaggressions. The objective of this study is to describe the most common forms of microaggressions reported by women in surgery.
We conducted a scoping review using PubMed/MEDLINE, Ovid, and Web of Science to describe the international, indexed English-language literature on gender-based microaggressions experienced by female surgeons, surgical trainees, and medical students in surgery. After screening by title, abstract, and full-text, 37 articles were retained for data extraction and analysis. Microaggressions were analyzed using the Sexist Microaggression Experience and Stress Scale (MESS) framework and stratified by country of origin.
Gender-based microaggression publications most commonly originated from the United States (n = 27 articles), Canada (n = 3), and India (n = 2). Gender-based microaggressions were classified into environmental invalidations (n = 20), being treated like a second-class citizen (n = 18), assumptions of traditional gender roles (n = 12), sexual objectification (n = 11), assumptions of inferiority (n = 10), being forced to leave gender at the door (n = 8), and experiencing sexist language (n = 6). Additionally, attendings were more frequently reported to experience microaggressions than surgical trainees and medical students, but more articles reported data on attendings (n = 16) than surgical trainees (n = 10) or students (n = 4).
While recent advancements have opened the field of surgery to women, there is still a lack of female representation, and persistent microaggressions may perpetuate this gender disparity. Addressing microaggressions against female surgeons is essential to achieving gender equity in surgical practice.
除了系统性的性别差距外,外科领域的女性还会遭遇人际间的微侵犯。本研究的目的是描述外科领域女性报告的最常见形式的微侵犯。
我们通过 PubMed/MEDLINE、Ovid 和 Web of Science 进行了范围综述,以描述国际上、索引的英语文献中外科领域女外科医生、外科住院医师和医学生所经历的基于性别的微侵犯。经过标题、摘要和全文筛选,保留了 37 篇文章进行数据提取和分析。微侵犯使用性别歧视微侵犯体验和应激量表(MESS)框架进行分析,并按原籍国进行分层。
基于性别的微侵犯文献最常见于美国(n=27 篇)、加拿大(n=3)和印度(n=2)。基于性别的微侵犯分为环境否定(n=20)、被视为二等公民(n=18)、传统性别角色假设(n=12)、性对象化(n=11)、自卑假设(n=10)、被迫将性别抛在门外(n=8)和遭遇性别歧视语言(n=6)。此外,与外科住院医师和医学生相比,主治医生更频繁地经历微侵犯,但更多的文章报告了主治医生的数据(n=16),而不是外科住院医师(n=10)或学生(n=4)。
尽管最近的进展使女性能够进入外科领域,但女性的代表性仍然不足,持续的微侵犯可能会使这种性别差距永久化。解决针对女外科医生的微侵犯对于实现外科实践中的性别平等至关重要。