Emergency Medicine at Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis.
Angela Barron McBride Professor of Psychiatric Nursing at Indiana University School of Nursing, Indianapolis.
JAMA Netw Open. 2022 Mar 1;5(3):e221860. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.1860.
The number of women entering medicine continues to increase, but women remain underrepresented at all tiers of academic rank and chair leadership in EM. The proportion of female chairs in EM has not exceeded 12% in 2 decades.
To compare how male and female EM chairs experience leadership emergence, with attention to factors associated with support of the emergence of female chairs.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This qualitative descriptive study was conducted between April 2020 and February 2021 at 36 US academic EM departments. Eligible participants were all current and emeritus female EM academic department chairs (with a possible cohort of 20 individuals) and an equal number of randomly selected male chairs.
Semistructured interviews were conducted via teleconferencing with an 11-item interview guide.
Qualitative findings identifying similarities and gender differences in leadership emergence were collected.
Among 20 female chairs in EM, 19 women (mean [SD] age, 56.2 [7.1] years) participated in the study (95.0% response rate). There were 13 active chairs, and 6 women were within 5 years of chair leadership. Among 77 male chairs in EM identified and randomized, 37 men were invited to participate, among whom 19 individuals (51.4%) agreed to participate; 18 men (mean [SD] age, 52.2 [7.5] years) completed their interviews. Reflecting upon their experiences of leadership emergence, male chairs saw leadership as their destiny, were motivated to be chairs to gain influence, were dismissive of risks associated with chairing a department, and were sponsored by senior male leaders to advance in leadership. Female chairs saw leadership as something they had long prepared for, were motivated to be chairs to make a difference, were cautious of risks associated with chairing a department that could derail their careers, and relied on their own efforts to advance in leadership.
This study found that experiences of leadership emergence differed by gender. These results suggest that leadership development strategies tailored to women should promote early internalization of leadership identity, tightly link leadership to purpose, cultivate active sponsorship, and encourage women's risk tolerance through leadership validation to support women's development as leaders and demonstrate a commitment to gender equity in EM leadership.
尽管进入医学领域的女性人数持续增加,但在急诊医学(EM)的所有学术职称和主席领导岗位中,女性仍然代表性不足。在过去 20 年中,EM 主席中女性的比例从未超过 12%。
本研究比较了男性和女性 EM 主席的领导产生经历,重点关注与支持女性主席产生相关的因素。
设计、设置和参与者:这是一项在 2020 年 4 月至 2021 年 2 月期间在美国 36 个学术 EM 部门进行的定性描述性研究。合格的参与者为所有现任和前任女性 EM 学术部门主席(可能有 20 名参与者)以及随机选择的同等数量的男性主席。
通过电话会议进行半结构化访谈,并使用 11 项访谈指南。
收集了领导产生方面的相似之处和性别差异的定性发现。
在 20 名 EM 女性主席中,有 19 名女性(平均[标准差]年龄,56.2[7.1]岁)参与了这项研究(95.0%的回复率)。有 13 位现任主席,其中 6 位女性距离担任主席职务还有 5 年。在确定并随机抽取的 77 名 EM 男性主席中,有 37 人应邀参加,其中 19 人(51.4%)同意参加;18 名男性(平均[标准差]年龄,52.2[7.5]岁)完成了访谈。男性主席在回顾自己的领导产生经历时认为领导是他们的宿命,担任主席是为了获得影响力,对担任主席可能带来的风险不屑一顾,并得到资深男性领导的支持以推进领导工作。女性主席则认为领导是她们长期以来一直准备的事情,担任主席是为了有所作为,对担任主席可能带来的风险保持谨慎,以免影响职业发展,并依靠自己的努力推进领导工作。
这项研究发现,领导产生的经历存在性别差异。这些结果表明,针对女性的领导力发展策略应促进领导力认同的早期内化,将领导力与目标紧密联系,培养积极的支持,并通过领导力验证鼓励女性的风险承受能力,以支持女性的领导发展,并表明对急诊医学领导力中的性别平等的承诺。