Maqsood Hamza, Naveed Sadiq, Younus Shifa, Khan Muhammad T, Khosa Faisal
Internal Medicine, Nishtar Medical University, Multan, PAK.
Psychiatry, Hartford Hospital - Institute of Living, CT, USA.
Cureus. 2021 Sep 5;13(9):e17740. doi: 10.7759/cureus.17740. eCollection 2021 Sep.
Introduction Benefits of increasing diversity in teams include the addition of different perspectives leading to increased innovation and creativity, faster problem solving, improved workforce morale, and reduced burnout leading to improved patient outcomes. This article reviewed the trend of gender and racial disparity in vascular neurology fellowship programs. Methods We retrospectively analyzed the data extracted from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)'s annual Data Resource Books from 2007 to 2019. ACGME cataloged gender as men and women and race/ethnicity was categorized as White/Non-Hispanic, Asian or Pacific Island, Hispanic, Black/Non-Hispanic, Native American/Alaskan, others, and unknown. Counts, proportions, relative, and absolute percentage changes were calculated to highlight trends in resident appointments over time and across the specialty of vascular neurology. Results The representation of females increased steadily; with a relative increase of 11.78% from the year 2007 to 2019. Race/ethnicity was reported starting from the year 2011. When averaged across the nine-year study period, 35% of the study sample was White (Non-Hispanic), followed by Asian/Pacific Islanders at 25%. The representation of Hispanics was 4.8%, Black/African Americans were 3%, Native Americans/ Alaskans were 0.23% and Others were 13% of the total study population. For 17.7% of the fellows, racial data were not known and was categorized as Unknown racial distribution. Conclusion Our study concludes that gender and racial disparity persists within the fellowship programs of vascular neurology. Effective strategies at individual, administrative, and national levels are needed to engage women and under-represented minorities in vascular neurology as a career choice.
引言 团队多样性增加的益处包括带来不同观点,从而促进创新和创造力、更快解决问题、提高员工士气、减少职业倦怠,进而改善患者治疗效果。本文回顾了血管神经科学 fellowship 项目中的性别和种族差异趋势。
方法 我们回顾性分析了从 2007 年至 2019 年研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)年度数据资源手册中提取的数据。ACGME 将性别分为男性和女性,种族/族裔分为白人/非西班牙裔、亚洲或太平洋岛民、西班牙裔、黑人/非西班牙裔、美洲原住民/阿拉斯加人、其他以及未知。计算了数量、比例、相对和绝对百分比变化,以突出住院医师任命随时间以及在血管神经科学专业中的趋势。
结果 女性的占比稳步增加;从 2007 年到 2019 年相对增加了 11.78%。种族/族裔数据从 2011 年开始报告。在九年的研究期内平均计算,35%的研究样本是白人(非西班牙裔),其次是亚洲/太平洋岛民,占 25%。西班牙裔的占比为 4.8%,黑人/非裔美国人占 3%,美洲原住民/阿拉斯加人占 0.23%,其他占总研究人群的 13%。对于 17.7%的研究员,种族数据未知,归类为未知种族分布。
结论 我们的研究得出结论,血管神经科学 fellowship 项目中存在性别和种族差异。需要在个人、行政和国家层面采取有效策略,使女性和代表性不足的少数族裔将血管神经科学作为职业选择。