Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Department of Medicine, St. Michael's Hospital, Unity Health Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Med Teach. 2022 Jun;44(6):614-621. doi: 10.1080/0142159X.2021.2014799. Epub 2022 Jan 20.
Ensuring a representative workforce is a matter of equity and social justice and has implications for patient care and population health. We examined the relationship of the binary gender identity and race of physicians who felt comfortable to self-identify, with workplace experiences and career satisfaction in academic medicine.
The outcome of interest of a cross-sectional survey of full-time clinical faculty members within the Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, was physician's self-reported career satisfaction. Using logistic regression, we examined relationships of binary gender identity (female/male) and race [under-represented minority (URM) versus over-represented in medicine (ORM)] to: workplace experiences (respectful interactions, perception of having to work harder, exclusion from social networks, witnessing/experiencing unprofessionalism, and confidence in taking action to address incivility without reprisal); and career satisfaction, controlling for age, rank, protected time, and workplace experiences.
Female gender and URM status were associated with younger age, lower rank, and less positive workplace experiences. 132 respondents (44.4%) strongly agreed they had career satisfaction. Compared with ORM men, career satisfaction was significantly lower for URM and ORM female physicians (OR 0.30, 95% CI 0.14-0.65, and 0.48, 95% CI 0.27-0.85, respectively) and non-significantly lower for URM male physicians (OR 0.62, 95% CI 0.32-1.19). Adjustment for academic rank and workplace experiences fully attenuated these relationships.
URM female academic physicians had lower career satisfaction than their ORM male counterparts, largely explained by systematic differences in workplace experiences, particularly perceptions of exclusion from social networks and having to work harder to be perceived as legitimate scholars. This suggests a role for institutions and leaders to build inclusive, anti-racist, and anti-oppressive cultures to support the flourishing of all faculty.
确保员工队伍具有代表性是公平和社会正义的问题,这对患者护理和人口健康都有影响。我们研究了在多伦多大学医学系全职临床教师中进行的横断面调查中,自我认同舒适的医生的二元性别认同和种族与工作场所经历和学术医学职业满意度的关系。
我们使用逻辑回归,研究了二元性别认同(女性/男性)和种族[代表性不足的少数群体(URM)与医学中代表性过高(ORM)]与以下方面的关系:工作场所经历(相互尊重的互动、感觉必须更加努力工作、被排除在社交网络之外、目睹/经历不专业行为、有信心采取行动解决不文明行为而不会受到报复)和职业满意度,同时控制年龄、职级、受保护时间和工作场所经历。
女性和 URM 身份与年龄较小、职级较低和工作场所经历较差相关。132 名受访者(44.4%)强烈同意他们对自己的职业感到满意。与 ORM 男性相比,URM 和 ORM 女性医生的职业满意度明显较低(比值比 0.30,95%置信区间 0.14-0.65,和 0.48,95%置信区间 0.27-0.85),而 URM 男性医生的职业满意度差异无统计学意义(比值比 0.62,95%置信区间 0.32-1.19)。调整学术职级和工作场所经历后,这些关系完全减弱。
URM 女性学术医生的职业满意度低于 ORM 男性医生,这主要是由于工作场所经历的系统性差异造成的,特别是被排除在社交网络之外和为了被视为合法学者而必须更加努力工作的认知。这表明机构和领导者有责任建立包容、反种族主义和反压迫的文化,以支持所有教职员工的发展。