Summers Olivia S, Medcalf Rebecca, Hubbard Katherine A, McCarroll Charlotte S
Department of Comparative Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Surrey, Guildford, United Kingdom.
Department of Sociology, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, United Kingdom.
Front Vet Sci. 2023 Apr 28;10:940836. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2023.940836. eCollection 2023.
Recent research showed that 29% of respondents in a survey of veterinary professionals reported experiencing self-described discrimination in their workplaces. Senior colleagues and clients were responsible for discriminatory behaviors. As part of their training, veterinary students are expected to undertake extra-mural study (EMS) within these same workplaces and are likely to be vulnerable to discrimination from senior colleagues and clients. This study's objectives were to identify and characterize the pattern of perceived discriminatory behaviors (i.e., belief of being treated unfairly) that veterinary students encounter while seeing practice and explore students' attitudes toward discrimination.
Students at British and Irish veterinary schools who undertook some clinical EMS completed a survey of closed and open questions as part of a cross-sectional study. Demographic data and experiences of discrimination with details of incidents and reporting were collected, alongside respondent attitudes. Quantitative data were analyzed using Pearson's chi-squared analysis to analyse respondents' characteristics and their experiences of discriminatory behaviors and subsequent reporting. Qualitative content analysis was used for open-question data.
Of the 403 respondents, 36.0% had perceived behavior they believed was discriminatory. The most frequent form of discrimination was based on gender (38.0%), followed by ethnicity (15.7%). There were significant associations between respondents' experience of discriminatory behaviors and the following characteristics: age ( = 0.0096), disability ( < 0.00001), race/ethnicity ( < 0.0001), gender/sex ( = 0.018), and LGBTQ+ status ( = 0.001). Supervising veterinarians were the most commonly reported perpetrators of discriminatory behaviors (39.3%) compared with clients (36.4%). Only 13.9% of respondents who experienced discrimination reported the event(s). Respondents with a disability were the least likely to agree with the statement that professional bodies are doing enough to tackle discrimination ( < 0.0001). Most respondents agreed that sexism is still an issue (74.4%), but men were more likely to disagree ( = 0.004). Most respondents felt that ethnic diversity needed to be increased (96.3%).
Discriminatory behavior is a problem for students seeing practice, especially those with one or more protected characteristics (as defined by the UK Equality Act 2010). Improved education would need to include perspectives from minority groups to help remove discriminatory behavior from veterinary practice.
最近的研究表明,在一项针对兽医专业人员的调查中,29%的受访者表示在工作场所遭遇过他们所描述的歧视。高级同事和客户是歧视行为的始作俑者。作为培训的一部分,兽医专业学生需要在这些相同的工作场所进行校外实习(EMS),并且很可能容易受到来自高级同事和客户的歧视。本研究的目的是识别和描述兽医专业学生在见习期间所遭遇的感知到的歧视行为模式(即认为受到不公平对待的信念),并探讨学生对歧视的态度。
作为一项横断面研究的一部分,英国和爱尔兰兽医学校中进行了一些临床EMS的学生完成了一项包含封闭式和开放式问题的调查。收集了人口统计学数据、歧视经历,包括事件细节和报告情况,以及受访者的态度。定量数据使用Pearson卡方分析进行分析,以分析受访者的特征、他们的歧视行为经历以及随后的报告情况。定性内容分析用于开放式问题数据。
在403名受访者中,36.0%的人认为他们遭遇了他们认为是歧视性的行为。最常见的歧视形式是基于性别(38.0%),其次是种族(15.7%)。受访者的歧视行为经历与以下特征之间存在显著关联:年龄(P = 0.0096)、残疾(P < 0.00001)、种族/民族(P < 0.0001)、性别(P = 0.018)以及 LGBTQ+ 身份(P = 0.001)。与客户(36.4%)相比,被报告的歧视行为的实施者中监督兽医最为常见(39.3%)。只有13.9%经历过歧视的受访者报告了这些事件。残疾受访者最不可能认同专业机构在应对歧视方面做得足够的说法(P < 0.0001)。大多数受访者同意性别歧视仍然是一个问题(74.4%),但男性更有可能持不同意见(P = 0.004)。大多数受访者认为需要增加种族多样性(96.3%)。
歧视行为对于见习学生来说是一个问题,尤其是对于那些具有一种或多种受保护特征的学生(如英国2010年《平等法案》所定义)。改进教育需要纳入少数群体的观点,以帮助消除兽医实践中的歧视行为。