Department of Radiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina; Duke Cancer Institute, Durham, North Carolina.
Duke Cancer Institute, Durham, North Carolina; Family Medicine and Community Health, Duke School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina.
J Am Coll Radiol. 2023 Feb;20(2):268-275. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2022.04.011. Epub 2022 Jul 2.
To understand how women and historically underrepresented minority medical students perceive radiology as a potential career choice.
Medical students representing a broad spectrum of radiology exposure from a single institution were invited to participate in a mixed-methods study. Participants completed a 16-item survey about demographics and perceptions of radiology. Ten focus groups were administered to probe decision making regarding career selection. The themes influencing women and historically underrepresented minority students are presented.
Forty-nine medical students, including 29 (59%) women and 17 (35%) underrepresented minorities, participated. Most participants (28 of 48, 58%) reported men outnumbered women in radiology. Female participants reported a lack of mentorship and role models as major concerns. Outreach efforts focused on the family-friendly nature of radiology were viewed as patronizing. Demographic improvements in the field were viewed as very slow. Forty-six percent (22 of 48) of participants indicated that radiology had a less underrepresented racial or ethnic workforce than other medical specialties. Minority participants especially noted a lack of radiology presence in mainstream media, so students have few preconceived biases. A failure to organically connect with the mostly White male radiologists because of a lack of shared background was a major barrier. Finally, participants described a hidden curriculum that pushes minority medical students away from specialty fields like radiology and toward primary care fields to address underserved communities and health care disparities.
Women and historically underrepresented minority medical students perceive major barriers to choosing a career in radiology. Radiology departments must develop sophisticated multilevel approaches to improve diversity.
了解女性和历史上代表性不足的少数族裔医学生如何将放射科视为潜在的职业选择。
邀请来自单一机构的具有广泛放射科接触背景的医学生参加一项混合方法研究。参与者完成了一份关于人口统计学和放射科认知的 16 项调查。进行了 10 个焦点小组,以探究职业选择的决策。提出了影响女性和历史上代表性不足的少数族裔学生的主题。
共有 49 名医学生参加了研究,其中 29 名(59%)是女性,17 名(35%)是少数族裔。大多数参与者(48 人中的 28 人,58%)报告放射科的男性人数多于女性。女性参与者报告缺乏导师和榜样是主要关注点。以放射科的家庭友好性质为重点的外展工作被视为光顾。该领域的人口统计改善被认为非常缓慢。46%(48 人中的 22 人)的参与者表示,放射科的代表性不足的种族或族裔劳动力比其他医学专业少。少数族裔参与者特别指出,主流媒体中缺乏放射科的存在,因此学生们几乎没有先入为主的偏见。由于缺乏共同背景,与主要是白人男性放射科医生无法有机地联系,这是一个主要障碍。最后,参与者描述了一个隐藏的课程,它将少数族裔医学生从放射科等专业领域推向初级保健领域,以解决服务不足的社区和医疗保健差距问题。
女性和历史上代表性不足的少数族裔医学生认为选择放射科职业的主要障碍。放射科部门必须制定复杂的多层次方法来提高多样性。