Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Ann Glob Health. 2022 Jul 11;88(1):53. doi: 10.5334/aogh.3705. eCollection 2022.
Despite advances in gender equality, women still experience inequitable gaps in global health leadership, and barriers to women's advancement as leaders in global health have been well described in the literature. In 2021, the Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health conducted two virtual working groups for emerging women leaders to share challenges and suggest solutions to advance women's leadership in global health. In this paper, we present emerging themes from the working groups, provide a framework for the results, and discuss strategies for advancing women's leadership in global health.
The objective of this paper is to synthesize and share the themes of the two working group sessions to provide strategies for improving women's leadership training and opportunities in the field of global health.
Approximately 182 women in the global health field participated in two virtual working group sessions hosted by the Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health using the Zoom platform. Participants were divided into virtual breakout rooms and discussed pre-assigned topics related to women's leadership in global health. The participants then returned to share their ideas in a plenary session. Notes from the breakout rooms and transcripts from the plenary session were analyzed through a participatory and iterative thematic analysis approach.
We found that the working group participants identified two overarching themes that were critical for emerging women leaders to find success in global health leadership. First, the acquisition of individual essential skills is necessary to advance in their careers. Second, the institutional environments should be setup to encourage and enable women to enter and succeed in leadership roles. The participants also shared suggestions for improving women's leadership opportunities such as including the use of virtual technologies to increase training and networking opportunities, intersectionality in mentorship and sponsorship, combatting impostor syndrome, and the importance of work-life balance.
Investing in women and their leadership potential has the promise to improve health and wealth at the individual, institutional, and community levels. This manuscript offers lessons and proposes solutions for increasing women's leadership through improving individual level essential skills and fostering environments in which women leaders can emerge and thrive.
尽管在性别平等方面取得了进步,但女性在全球卫生领导力方面仍面临不平等的差距,而且女性在全球卫生领域晋升的障碍在文献中已有详细描述。2021 年,约翰霍普金斯全球健康中心为新兴女性领导者举办了两次虚拟工作组会议,以分享挑战并提出推进女性在全球健康领导力方面的解决方案。在本文中,我们呈现了工作组的新兴主题,提供了结果框架,并讨论了推进女性在全球健康领导力方面的策略。
本文旨在综合和分享两个工作组会议的主题,为改善全球卫生领域女性领导力培训和机会提供策略。
大约 182 名全球卫生领域的女性通过约翰霍普金斯全球健康中心使用 Zoom 平台举办的两次虚拟工作组会议参与其中。参与者被分成虚拟分组讨论室,并讨论与全球卫生领域女性领导力相关的预先指定主题。然后,参与者回到全体会议上分享他们的想法。从分组讨论室和全体会议记录中分析了笔记,采用了一种参与式和迭代主题分析方法。
我们发现,工作组参与者确定了两个至关重要的主题,对于新兴女性领导者在全球卫生领导力方面取得成功至关重要。首先,需要获得个人的基本技能才能在职业生涯中取得进步。其次,应该建立机构环境,以鼓励和使女性能够进入并成功担任领导角色。参与者还分享了改善女性领导机会的建议,例如使用虚拟技术增加培训和网络机会、导师和赞助中的交叉性、克服冒名顶替综合征以及工作与生活平衡的重要性。
投资于女性及其领导潜力有望改善个人、机构和社区层面的健康和财富。本文提供了通过提高女性领导者的个人基本技能和培养女性领导者能够涌现和茁壮成长的环境来增加女性领导的经验教训和提出解决方案。