S. Berwick is a hematology/oncology fellow, Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York.
H. Calev is a hospitalist, Emory University Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia.
Acad Med. 2021 Jun 1;96(6):869-875. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000004060.
Evaluation of the medical profession at all levels has exposed episodes of gender-based role misidentification whereby women physicians are disproportionately misidentified as nonphysicians. The authors of this study investigate this phenomenon and its repercussions, quantifying the frequency with which resident physicians experience role misidentification and the effect this has on their experience and behavior.
In 2018, the authors conducted a cross-sectional survey study of internal medicine, surgical, and emergency medicine residents at a single, large, urban, tertiary academic medical center. The survey tool captured both the self-reported frequency and effect of professional misidentification. The authors used a t test and linear multivariate regression to analyze the results.
Of the 260 residents who received the survey, 186 (72%) responded, and the authors analyzed the responses of 182. All 85 of the women respondents (100%) reported being misidentified as nonphysicians at least once in their professional experience by patients or staff members, compared with 49% of the 97 men respondents. Of those 182 residents, 35% of women were misidentified more than 8 times per month by patients compared with 1% of men. Of the 85 women physicians responding to the survey, 38% felt angry and 36% felt less satisfied with their jobs as a result of misidentification compared with, respectively, 7% and 9% of men. In response to role misidentification, 51% of women changed their manner of attire and 81% changed their manner of introduction, compared with, respectively, 7% and 37% of men.
These survey results demonstrate that women physicians are more likely than men physicians to be misidentified as nonphysicians and that role misidentification provokes gender-polarized psychological and behavioral responses that have potentially important professional ramifications.
对各级医务人员的评估暴露了基于性别的角色错位现象,即女性医生被不成比例地误认为非医务人员。本研究的作者调查了这一现象及其影响,量化了住院医师经历角色错位的频率及其对他们的经验和行为的影响。
2018 年,作者对一家大型城市三级学术医疗中心的内科、外科和急诊医学住院医师进行了横断面调查研究。调查工具捕捉了专业身份识别错误的自我报告频率和影响。作者使用 t 检验和线性多元回归分析结果。
在收到调查的 260 名住院医师中,有 186 名(72%)做出了回应,作者对 182 名的回应进行了分析。所有 85 名女性受访者(100%)报告说,在他们的专业经历中,至少有一次被患者或工作人员误认为非医务人员,而 97 名男性受访者中只有 49%。在这 182 名住院医师中,35%的女性患者每月被误诊超过 8 次,而男性只有 1%。在回答调查的 85 名女医生中,38%的人因身份识别错误而感到愤怒,36%的人对工作的满意度降低,而男性分别为 7%和 9%。由于角色错位,51%的女性改变了着装方式,81%改变了自我介绍方式,而男性分别为 7%和 37%。
这些调查结果表明,女性医生比男性医生更有可能被误认为是非医务人员,而角色错位会引发性别两极化的心理和行为反应,这可能对专业产生重要影响。