Department of Emergency Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Environmental Sciences, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2024 Jul;33(7):948-955. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2023.1006. Epub 2024 May 22.
The purpose of this qualitative descriptive study is to describe how women academic department chairs in emergency medicine, surgery, and anesthesiology experience humor in the workplace. Interviews were conducted with 35 women department chairs in academic medicine from 27 institutions that aimed to describe women's leadership emergence. The data from the primary study yielded rich and revealing themes involving participants' experiences with humor in the context of their leadership roles, justifying a secondary analysis focusing specifically on these experiences. Relevant remarks were extracted, coded, and summarized. Participants discussed two broad types of humor-related experiences. First, they described how they responded to aggressive gender-based humor directed at themselves or their colleagues by tolerating it or expressing disapproval. This humor includes demeaning quips, insulting monikers, sexist jokes, and derogatory stories. Participants often did not confront this humor directly as they feared being rejected or ostracized by colleagues. Second, they described how they initiated humor to address gender-related workplace issues by highlighting gender inequalities, coping with sexual harassment and assault, and managing gender-based leadership challenges. Participants felt constrained in their own use of humor because of the need to be taken seriously as women leaders. Women leaders in academic medicine use humor to confront gender-related issues and experience aggressive gender-based humor in the workplace. The constraints placed on women leaders discourage them from effectively confronting this aggressive gender-based humor and perpetuating gender inequities. Eliminating aggressive gender-based humor is needed to create safe and equitable work environments in academic medicine.
本定性描述性研究旨在描述女性急诊医学、外科和麻醉学学术部门主席在工作场所如何体验幽默。对来自 27 家机构的 35 名女性学术部门主席进行了访谈,旨在描述女性的领导地位的出现。主要研究的数据产生了丰富而有启发性的主题,涉及参与者在领导角色背景下的幽默体验,这证明了专门针对这些体验的二次分析是合理的。提取、编码和总结了相关言论。参与者讨论了两种广泛的与幽默相关的体验。首先,他们描述了自己如何应对针对自己或同事的攻击性性别幽默,要么容忍,要么表示不赞成。这种幽默包括贬低的俏皮话、侮辱性的绰号、性别歧视的笑话和贬损性的故事。参与者通常不会直接面对这种幽默,因为他们担心被同事拒绝或排斥。其次,他们描述了如何通过突出性别不平等、应对性骚扰和性侵犯以及管理基于性别的领导挑战来发起幽默来解决与性别相关的工作场所问题。由于需要作为女性领导者被认真对待,参与者在自己使用幽默时感到受到限制。学术医学领域的女性领导者使用幽默来应对与性别相关的问题,并在工作场所体验攻击性的性别幽默。对女性领导者的限制阻碍了她们有效地应对这种攻击性的性别幽默和延续性别不平等。消除攻击性的性别幽默是在学术医学中创造安全和平等的工作环境所必需的。