Schlick Cary Jo R, Ellis Ryan J, Etkin Caryn D, Greenberg Caprice C, Greenberg Jacob A, Turner Patricia L, Buyske Jo, Hoyt David B, Nasca Thomas J, Bilimoria Karl Y, Hu Yue-Yung
Surgical Outcomes and Quality Improvement Center, Department of Surgery, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois.
Division of Research and Optimal Patient Care, American College of Surgeons, Chicago, Illinois.
JAMA Surg. 2021 Oct 1;156(10):942-952. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2021.3195.
Mistreatment is a common experience among surgical residents and is associated with burnout. Women have been found to experience mistreatment at higher rates than men. Further characterization of surgical residents' experiences with gender discrimination and sexual harassment may inform solutions.
To describe the types, sources, and factors associated with (1) discrimination based on gender, gender identity, or sexual orientation and (2) sexual harassment experienced by residents in general surgery programs across the US.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional national survey study was conducted after the 2019 American Board of Surgery In-Training Examination (ABSITE). The survey asked respondents about their experiences with gender discrimination and sexual harassment during the academic year starting July 1, 2018, through the testing date in January 2019. All clinical residents enrolled in general surgery programs accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education were eligible.
Specific types, sources, and factors associated with gender-based discrimination and sexual harassment.
Primary outcome was the prevalence of gender discrimination and sexual harassment. Secondary outcomes included sources of discrimination and harassment and associated individual- and program-level factors using gender-stratified multivariable logistic regression models.
The survey was administered to 8129 eligible residents; 6956 responded (85.6% response rate)from 301 general surgery programs. Of those, 6764 residents had gender data available (3968 [58.7%] were male and 2796 [41.3%] were female individuals). In total, 1878 of 2352 female residents (79.8%) vs 562 of 3288 male residents (17.1%) reported experiencing gender discrimination (P < .001), and 1026 of 2415 female residents (42.5%) vs 721 of 3360 male residents (21.5%) reported experiencing sexual harassment (P < .001). The most common type of gender discrimination was being mistaken for a nonphysician (1943 of 5640 residents [34.5%] overall; 1813 of 2352 female residents [77.1%]; 130 of 3288 male residents [4.0%]), with patients and/or families as the most frequent source. The most common form of sexual harassment was crude, demeaning, or explicit comments (1557 of 5775 residents [27.0%] overall; 901 of 2415 female residents [37.3%]; 656 of 3360 male residents [19.5%]); among female residents, the most common source of this harassment was patients and/or families, and among male residents, the most common source was coresidents and/or fellows. Among female residents, gender discrimination was associated with pregnancy (odds ratio [OR], 1.93; 95% CI, 1.03-3.62) and higher ABSITE scores (highest vs lowest quartile: OR, 1.67; 95% CI, 1.14-2.43); among male residents, gender discrimination was associated with parenthood (OR, 1.72; 95% CI, 1.31-2.27) and lower ABSITE scores (highest vs lowest quartile: OR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.43-0.76). Senior residents were more likely to report experiencing sexual harassment than interns (postgraduate years 4 and 5 vs postgraduate year 1: OR, 1.77 [95% CI, 1.40-2.24] among female residents; 1.31 [95% CI, 1.01-1.70] among male residents).
In this study, gender discrimination and sexual harassment were common experiences among surgical residents and were frequently reported by women. These phenomena warrant multifaceted context-specific strategies for improvement.
虐待是外科住院医师中常见的经历,且与职业倦怠相关。研究发现,女性遭受虐待的比例高于男性。对外科住院医师在性别歧视和性骚扰方面的经历进行进一步特征描述可能有助于找到解决办法。
描述与(1)基于性别、性别认同或性取向的歧视以及(2)美国普通外科住院医师所经历的性骚扰相关的类型、来源和因素。
设计、背景和参与者:这项横断面全国性调查研究在2019年美国外科委员会住院医师培训考试(ABSITE)之后进行。该调查询问了受访者在2018年7月1日至2019年1月考试日期这一学年期间的性别歧视和性骚扰经历。所有就读于经研究生医学教育认证委员会认证的普通外科项目的临床住院医师均符合条件。
与基于性别的歧视和性骚扰相关的具体类型、来源和因素。
主要结局是性别歧视和性骚扰的患病率。次要结局包括歧视和骚扰的来源以及使用性别分层多变量逻辑回归模型分析相关的个人和项目层面因素。
该调查共向8129名符合条件的住院医师发放问卷;来自301个普通外科项目的6956人回复(回复率85.6%)。其中,6764名住院医师有性别数据(3968名[58.7%]为男性,2796名[41.3%]为女性)。在2352名女性住院医师中,共有1878名(79.8%)报告经历过性别歧视,而在3288名男性住院医师中,有562名(17.1%)报告经历过性别歧视(P <.001);在2415名女性住院医师中,有1026名(42.5%)报告经历过性骚扰,而在3360名男性住院医师中,有721名(21.5%)报告经历过性骚扰(P <.001)。最常见的性别歧视类型是被误认为非医生(在5640名住院医师中,共有1943名[34.5%];在2352名女性住院医师中,有1813名[77.1%];在3288名男性住院医师中,有130名[4.0%]),患者和/或家属是最常见的来源。最常见的性骚扰形式是粗俗、贬低或露骨的言论(在5775名住院医师中,共有1557名[27.0%];在2415名女性住院医师中,有901名[37.3%];在3360名男性住院医师中,有656名[19.5%]);在女性住院医师中,这种骚扰最常见的来源是患者和/或家属,而在男性住院医师中,最常见的来源是同组住院医师和/或研究员。在女性住院医师中,性别歧视与怀孕相关(比值比[OR],1.93;95%置信区间,1.03 - 3.62)以及较高的ABSITE分数(最高四分位数与最低四分位数相比:OR,1.6