University of Kansas School of Medicine, Kansas City, KS 66061, USA.
Department of Surgery, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS 66061, USA.
Am J Surg. 2024 Feb;228:5-9. doi: 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2023.07.018. Epub 2023 Jul 11.
Women comprise nearly half of all residents in training, yet there is a significant disparity of women in academic leadership. Surgical subspecialties are dominated by men in both percentages of physicians and leadership positions. We sought to examine the association of advanced non-medical degrees with academic rank and gender in academic surgery departments.
Faculty from 126 ACGME-accredited academic medical centers were analyzed to identify faculty gender as described in online biographical information, advanced non-medical degrees, academic rank, and additional leadership positions held. Descriptive statistics and logistic regression models were used for statistical analyses.
4536 surgeons were identified, 69.3% men, 27.3% female, and 3.3% unlisted. Female surgeons were more likely to hold advanced non-doctoral degrees than men (18.2% vs. 13.8%, p < 0.002). Among those with advanced degrees, PhDs were held by 3.3% of women and 5.7% of men (p < 0.001). Female surgeons were less likely to hold the rank of Professor than male surgeons (15.8% vs 30.3%, p < 0.001), and more likely to hold the rank of Assistant Professor than male surgeons (51.9% vs 36.1%, p < 0.001). This likelihood remained true when analyzing only surgeons with one or more advanced non-medical degrees. Men were more likely to be Chair of Surgery (3.0%), Division Chief (9.6%), and Research Chair (0.5%); compared to women (1.3%; 4.8%; 0.2%; p = 0.001, <0.001, 0.21 respectively).
There continues to be a significant male predominance in general surgery. Gender discrepancy is also seen in professional rank and academic title despite women holding more advanced degrees. Advanced degrees are currently considered academic qualifications, but this does not reflect surgical academic leadership roles or rank.
女性占所有受训人员的近一半,但在学术领导层中,女性的比例却存在显著差异。在医师人数和领导职位方面,外科亚专业都以男性为主。我们试图研究非医学专业高级学位与学术外科部门的学术等级和性别之间的关联。
对 126 个 ACGME 认证的学术医疗中心的教员进行了分析,根据在线传记信息、非医学高级学位、学术等级和担任的其他领导职位来确定教员的性别。使用描述性统计和逻辑回归模型进行统计分析。
共确定了 4536 名外科医生,其中 69.3%为男性,27.3%为女性,3.3%未列出。女性外科医生比男性更有可能获得高级非博士学位(18.2%比 13.8%,p<0.002)。在拥有高级学位的人群中,女性拥有博士学位的比例为 3.3%,男性为 5.7%(p<0.001)。女性外科医生担任教授的比例低于男性外科医生(15.8%比 30.3%,p<0.001),而担任助理教授的比例高于男性外科医生(51.9%比 36.1%,p<0.001)。当仅分析拥有一个或多个非医学高级学位的外科医生时,这种可能性仍然成立。男性更有可能担任外科主席(3.0%)、分部主任(9.6%)和研究主席(0.5%);而女性则为 1.3%、4.8%和 0.2%(p=0.001,<0.001,0.21)。
普通外科仍以男性为主导。尽管女性拥有更多的高级学位,但在专业等级和学术头衔方面也存在性别差异。高级学位目前被认为是学术资格,但这并不能反映外科学术领导角色或等级。