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女性和少数族裔骨科住院医师报告的幸福感是否比同龄人更差,遭受的不当对待是否更多?

Do Women and Minority Orthopaedic Residents Report Experiencing Worse Well-being and More Mistreatment Than Their Peers?

作者信息

Gerull Katherine M, Klein Sandra E, Miller Anna N, Cipriano Cara A

机构信息

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.

Mercy Hospital St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.

出版信息

Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2024 Aug 1;482(8):1325-1337. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000003015. Epub 2024 Feb 27.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Despite the increased risk of attrition for women and minority residents during orthopaedic residency, there is currently a paucity of research examining the training environment of these residents. To address this, we examined how well-being constructs may differ for women or minority residents compared with their peers, and whether these residents report experiencing more mistreatment during residency.

QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) How does the psychologic wellbeing of women and minority residents compare with that of their peers regarding the constructs of burnout, lifestyle satisfaction, social belonging, and stereotype threat? (2) Do reported mistreatment experiences during residency differ among women and minority residents compared with their peers? (3) Is there a difference in the proportion of women and minority orthopaedic residents with thoughts of leaving residency compared with their peers?

METHODS

Seventeen orthopaedic residency programs in the 91 programs comprising the Collaborative Orthopaedic Educational Research Group agreed to participate in the study. Program directors sent an anonymous one-time survey with two reminders to all orthopaedic residents at their respective institutions. The survey instrument comprised validated and previously used instruments with face validity designed to measure burnout, satisfaction, duty-hour violations, belonging, stereotype threat, mistreatment, and thoughts of leaving residency, in addition to demographic information. Forty-three percent (211 of 491) of residents responded to the survey. Race or ethnicity data were combined into "White" and "underrepresented in orthopaedics" (URiO), which included residents who self-identified as Asian, African American, Hispanic or Latino, Native American, or other, given that these groups are all underrepresented racial and ethnic groups in orthopaedics. The demographic makeup of our study, 81% men and 75% White, is roughly comparable to the current demographic makeup of orthopaedic residency programs, which is 82% men and 74% White. Data were analyzed using chi-square tests, Fisher exact tests, and t-tests as appropriate. For comparisons of Likert scale measures, we used an anchor-based approach to determining the minimum detectable change (MDC) and set the MDC as a 1-point difference on a 5-point scale and a 1.5-point difference on a 7-point scale. Stereotype threat is reported as the mean ▵ from the neutral response, and ▵ of 1.5 or greater was considered significant.

RESULTS

Women residents were more likely than men to report experiencing emotional exhaustion (odds ratio 2.18 [95% confidence interval 1.1 to 4.5]; p = 0.03). Women reported experiencing stereotype threat regarding their identity as women surgeons (mean ▵ 1.5 ± 1.0). We did not identify a difference in men's and women's overall burnout (OR 1.4 [95% CI 0.7 to 3.0]; p = 0.3), lifestyle satisfaction across multiple domains, or sense of social belonging (men: 4.3, women 3.6; mean difference 0.7 [95% CI 0.4 to 0.9]; p < 0.001). We did not identify differences in overall burnout (OR 1.5 [95% CI 0.8 to 3.0]; p = 0.2), lifestyle satisfaction across multiple domains, sense of social belonging (White: 4.2, URiO: 3.9; mean difference 0.3 [95% CI 0.17 to 0.61]; p < 0.001), or stereotype threat (mean ▵ 0.8 ± 0.9) between White and URiO surgeons. Women were more likely than men to report experiencing mistreatment, with 84% (32 of 38) of women and 43% (70 of 164) of men reporting mistreatment at least a few times per year (OR 7.2 [95% CI 2.8 to 18.1]; p < 0.001). URiO residents were more likely than White residents to report experiencing mistreatment overall, with 65% (32 of 49) of URiO residents and 45% (66 of 148) of White residents reporting occurrences at least a few times per year (OR 2.3 [95% CI 1.2 to 4.6]; p = 0.01). Women were more likely than men to report experiencing gender discrimination (OR 52.6 [95% CI 18.9 to 146.1]; p < 0.001), discrimination based on pregnancy or childcare status (OR 4.3 [95% CI 1.4 to 12.8]; p = 0.005), and sexual harassment (OR 11.8 [95% CI 4.1 to 34.3]; p < 0.001). URiO residents were more likely than White residents to report experiencing racial discrimination (OR 7.8 [95% CI 3.4 to 18.2]; p < 0.001). More women than men had thoughts of leaving residency (OR 4.5 [95% CI 1.5 to 13.5]; p = 0.003), whereas URiO residents were not more likely to have thoughts of leaving than White residents (OR 2.2 [95% CI 0.7 to 6.6]; p = 0.1).

CONCLUSION

Although we did not detect meaningful differences in some measures of well-being, we identified that women report experiencing more emotional exhaustion and report stereotype threat regarding their identity as women surgeons. Women and URiO residents report more mistreatment than their peers, and women have more thoughts of leaving residency than men. These findings raise concern about some aspects of the training environment for women and URiO residents that could contribute to attrition during training.

CLINICAL RELEVANCE

Understanding how well-being and mistreatment affect underrepresented residents helps in developing strategies to better support women and URiO residents during training. We recommend that orthopaedic governing bodies consider gathering national data on resident well-being and mistreatment to identify specific issues and track data over time. Additionally, departments should examine their internal practices and organizational culture to address specific gaps in inclusivity, well-being, and mechanisms for resident support.

摘要

背景

尽管女性和少数族裔住院医师在骨科住院医师培训期间流失的风险增加,但目前关于这些住院医师培训环境的研究较少。为了解决这一问题,我们研究了女性或少数族裔住院医师与同龄人相比,其幸福感指标可能存在的差异,以及这些住院医师在培训期间是否报告遭受了更多的不当对待。

问题/目的:(1)在职业倦怠、生活方式满意度、社会归属感和刻板印象威胁等方面,女性和少数族裔住院医师的心理健康状况与同龄人相比如何?(2)与同龄人相比,女性和少数族裔住院医师在培训期间报告的不当对待经历是否存在差异?(3)与同龄人相比,有离开培训想法的女性和少数族裔骨科住院医师的比例是否存在差异?

方法

组成骨科教育研究协作组的91个项目中的17个骨科住院医师培训项目同意参与该研究。项目主任向各自机构的所有骨科住院医师发送了一份匿名的一次性调查问卷,并进行了两次提醒。调查问卷包括经过验证且先前使用过的具有表面效度的工具,旨在测量职业倦怠、满意度、违反值班时间、归属感、刻板印象威胁、不当对待以及离开培训的想法,此外还包括人口统计学信息。43%(491名中的211名)的住院医师回复了调查问卷。种族或族裔数据被合并为“白人”和“骨科领域代表性不足”(URiO),其中包括自我认定为亚洲人、非裔美国人、西班牙裔或拉丁裔、美洲原住民或其他族裔的住院医师,因为这些群体在骨科领域都是代表性不足的种族和族裔群体。我们研究的人口统计学构成,81%为男性,75%为白人,大致与目前骨科住院医师培训项目的人口统计学构成相当,即82%为男性,74%为白人。根据情况使用卡方检验、Fisher精确检验和t检验对数据进行分析。对于李克特量表测量的比较,我们采用基于锚点的方法来确定最小可检测变化(MDC),并将MDC设定为5分制量表上的1分差异和7分制量表上的1.5分差异。刻板印象威胁报告为与中性反应的平均差值,差值为1.5或更大被认为具有显著性。

结果

女性住院医师比男性更有可能报告经历情感耗竭(优势比2.18 [95%置信区间1.1至4.5];p = 0.03)。女性报告在作为女外科医生的身份方面经历了刻板印象威胁(平均差值1.5±1.0)。我们未发现男性和女性在总体职业倦怠(优势比1.4 [95%置信区间0.7至3.0];p = 0.3)、多个领域的生活方式满意度或社会归属感方面存在差异(男性:4.3,女性3.6;平均差值0.7 [95%置信区间0.4至0.9];p < 0.001)。我们未发现白人外科医生和URiO外科医生在总体职业倦怠(优势比1.5 [95%置信区间0.8至3.0];p = 0.2)、多个领域的生活方式满意度、社会归属感(白人:4.2,URiO:3.9;平均差值0.3 [95%置信区间0.17至0.61];p < 0.001)或刻板印象威胁(平均差值0.8±0.9)方面存在差异。女性比男性更有可能报告遭受不当对待,84%(38名中的32名)的女性和43%(164名中的70名)的男性报告每年至少遭受几次不当对待(优势比7.2 [95%置信区间2.8至18.1];p < 0.001)。总体而言,URiO住院医师比白人住院医师更有可能报告遭受不当对待,65%(49名中的32名)的URiO住院医师和45%(148名中的66名)的白人住院医师报告每年至少发生几次不当对待(优势比2.3 [95%置信区间1.2至4.6];p = 0.01)。女性比男性更有可能报告经历性别歧视(优势比52.6 [95%置信区间18.9至146.1];p < 0.001)、基于怀孕或育儿状况的歧视(优势比4.3 [95%置信区间1.4至12.8];p = 0.005)以及性骚扰(优势比11.8 [95%置信区间4.1至34.3];p < 0.001)。URiO住院医师比白人住院医师更有可能报告经历种族歧视(优势比7.8 [95%置信区间3.4至18.2];p < 0.001)。有离开培训想法的女性比男性更多(优势比4.5 [95%置信区间1.5至13.5];p = 0.003),而URiO住院医师并不比白人住院医师更有可能有离开培训的想法(优势比2.2 [95%置信区间0.7至6.6];p = 0.1)。

结论

尽管我们在一些幸福感指标上未发现有意义的差异,但我们发现女性报告经历了更多的情感耗竭,并报告在作为女外科医生的身份方面存在刻板印象威胁。女性和URiO住院医师比同龄人报告遭受了更多的不当对待,并且女性比男性有更多离开培训的想法。这些发现引发了对女性和URiO住院医师培训环境某些方面的关注,这些方面可能导致培训期间的流失。

临床意义

了解幸福感和不当对待如何影响代表性不足的住院医师,有助于制定策略,在培训期间更好地支持女性和URiO住院医师。我们建议骨科管理机构考虑收集关于住院医师幸福感和不当对待的全国性数据,以识别具体问题并随时间跟踪数据。此外,各部门应审查其内部做法和组织文化,以解决包容性、幸福感和住院医师支持机制方面的具体差距。

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