Department of Pediatrics, McGovern Medical School at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas.
Department of Pediatrics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Pediatrics. 2022 Sep 1;150(3). doi: 10.1542/peds.2021-055472.
Academic medicine diversity is important for addressing health disparities and training the next generation. A recent study highlighted the lack of diversity among pediatric trainees over time. However, trends in US pediatric faculty diversity have not been clearly illuminated. The aim of this study is to evaluate pediatric faculty diversity trends and compare racial/ethnic representation between pediatric faculty and the US population.
Repeat cross-sectional study of the Association of American Medical Colleges Faculty Roster of pediatric faculty from 2000 to 2020. Trends in sex, race, ethnicity, and rank were compared with the Cochran-Armitage test. Data on faculty race/ethnicity were compared with the general and child population by using US Census Bureau data.
Trends in underrepresented in medicine (URiM) faculty representation significantly increased at all ranks: professor (+3.5%, P < .0001), associate professor (+3.0%, P = .0001), and assistant professor (+2.5%, P = .0001). URiM male representation remained unchanged (P = .14), whereas significantly increased trends occurred in URiM female representation (+3.4%, P < .0001). African American/Black males significantly decreased representation at associate (-0.4%, P = .04) and assistant professor levels (-0.6%, P < .0001), and American Indian/Alaska Native males significantly decreased representation at the assistant professor rank (-0.1%, P < .0001). The percentage of URiM pediatric faculty representation was considerably lower compared with 2020 US overall and longitudinal child population representation.
The stagnation of URiM male representation and lack of faculty diversity reflective of the US population may have a critical impact on the ability to recruit/retain a diverse pediatric workforce and promote equitable care.
学术医学的多样性对于解决健康差距和培养下一代至关重要。最近的一项研究强调了儿科受训者的多样性随着时间的推移而缺乏。然而,美国儿科教师多样性的趋势尚未得到清晰阐明。本研究旨在评估儿科教师多样性趋势,并比较儿科教师与美国人口的种族/族裔代表性。
对美国医学协会 2000 年至 2020 年儿科教师师资名单进行重复的横断面研究。使用 Cochran-Armitage 检验比较性别、种族、族裔和职称趋势。使用美国人口普查局的数据,将教师的种族/族裔数据与一般人群和儿童人口进行比较。
在所有职称中,医学领域代表性不足(URiM)的教师人数呈显著增加趋势:教授(+3.5%,P <.0001)、副教授(+3.0%,P =.0001)和助理教授(+2.5%,P =.0001)。URiM 男性代表人数保持不变(P =.14),而 URiM 女性代表人数呈显著增加趋势(+3.4%,P <.0001)。非裔美国男性/黑人在副教授(-0.4%,P =.04)和助理教授(-0.6%,P <.0001)级别代表人数显著下降,而美洲印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民男性在助理教授级别代表人数显著下降(-0.1%,P <.0001)。URiM 儿科教师的代表性比例远低于 2020 年美国总体和纵向儿童人口的代表性比例。
URiM 男性代表人数的停滞不前和教师多样性缺乏反映了美国人口的情况,这可能对招聘/留住多元化儿科劳动力和促进公平护理的能力产生重大影响。