School of Medical, Indigenous and Health Sciences, Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia.
School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Nutr Diet. 2024 Apr;81(2):160-169. doi: 10.1111/1747-0080.12858. Epub 2023 Dec 19.
Male dietitians are under-represented in the global dietetics workforce, including in Australia. This study explores Australian males' experiences as dietitians in the Australian workforce, with the aim to identify influences that initially attracted them to dietetics, as well as barriers that may affect their decision to stay in or leave the profession.
A cross-sectional, semi-quantitative web-based survey was distributed to male dietitians using purposive, snowball sampling. Closed and open-ended questions were included. Descriptive statistics were generated, and content analysis of free-text responses identified major themes.
Seventy-one respondents opened the survey link, of which 65 respondents attempted the survey. Fifty-four (83.1%) respondents agreed that dietetics is female-dominated. An interest in food and nutrition was the most reported reason for studying dietetics (73.8%). Of the 55 respondents who were not intending to retire in the next 5 years, 15 (27.3%) stated they were somewhat or extremely likely to leave the profession of dietetics. Respondents identified issues that impacted their experiences as a male dietitian, including gender differences, a lack of male role models, barriers to career progression/employment, and perceptions of a lack of respect and impact within healthcare.
Australian male dietitians perceive systemic, social, and personal factors that have influenced their career experiences. Greater exposure to prominent male role models may be self-perpetuating in improving male dietitian recruitment and eventually, retention. A multi-pronged approach is needed to improve the rate of recruitment of male dietitians, with a role for tertiary education providers and peak dietetics bodies.
男性营养师在全球营养师劳动力中代表性不足,包括在澳大利亚。本研究探讨了澳大利亚男性营养师在澳大利亚劳动力中的工作经验,旨在确定最初吸引他们从事营养学的因素,以及可能影响他们决定留在或离开该职业的障碍。
采用目的抽样和滚雪球抽样,通过网络向男性营养师分发了一份横断面、半定量的在线调查。包括封闭式和开放式问题。生成描述性统计数据,并对自由文本回复进行内容分析,以确定主要主题。
71 名受访者打开了调查链接,其中 65 名受访者尝试了调查。54 名(83.1%)受访者同意,营养学领域以女性为主导。对食物和营养的兴趣是学习营养学的最常见原因(73.8%)。在不打算在未来 5 年内退休的 55 名受访者中,有 15 名(27.3%)表示他们离开营养师职业的可能性有些大或非常大。受访者确定了影响他们作为男性营养师工作经验的问题,包括性别差异、缺乏男性榜样、职业发展/就业障碍以及对缺乏尊重和在医疗保健中的影响的看法。
澳大利亚男性营养师认为有系统的、社会的和个人的因素影响了他们的职业经历。更多地接触知名的男性榜样可能会自我延续,从而提高男性营养师的招聘率,并最终提高其保留率。需要采取多管齐下的方法来提高男性营养师的招聘率,高等教育机构和营养师协会都可以发挥作用。