Department of Anesthesiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
Pain Physician. 2024 Jul;27(5):317-320.
The gender bias in academic anesthesiology is well known. Women are not only a minority in the field but also underrepresented in leadership positions. Reported reasons for this underrepresentation include barriers to career advancement, lack of mentorship, and differences in compensation, among others. Interventional pain, a competitive procedural subspecialty of anesthesiology, sees the trickle-down effects of this disparity. According to a report from the ACGME that sorted medical subspecialties by number of female trainees, pain medicine ranked in the bottom quartile across all disciplines from 2008-2016.
To better understand the landscape for women physicians in the field of pain medicine, we undertook this investigation to review the knowledge about the topic and what questions remain unanswered.
This study is a review of the current literature and aims to summarize and describe the landscape of pain medicine for women physicians.
All literature review and manuscript preparation took place at the Yale University School of Medicine.
We performed a comprehensive search using the PubMed, Scopus, and Cochrane databases for the combined terms "gender disparity," "pain medicine," and "anesthesiology," limiting our search to the year 2000 onward for the most recent literature on the topic. Our initial search retrieved 38 articles. All relevant articles pertaining to this perspective piece were collated. The available literature is discussed below.
Women are underrepresented in interventional pain. The grim scarcity of female pain physicians is unlikely to improve soon, since while the number of Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education pain fellowship programs continues to grow, women trainees comprise only between 22-25% of all pain medicine fellows. Additionally, although studies have compared the numbers of male interventional pain faculty to their female counterparts in academic hospitals and shown the ratio to range from 71.84-82% to 18-28.52%, respectively, no studies have truly explored the landscape for women physicians in private practice. Patients prefer and have better experiences with physicians who are racially and ethnically like themselves. In fact, the preference for and the lack of female clinicians have been associated with delayed pursuit of care and adverse health outcomes. The consequences of the burnout and attrition caused by the gender disparity, especially in a field like pain medicine, cannot be understate.
The review might not have been comprehensive, and relevant studies might not have been included.
While the gender disparity in academia is well documented for both anesthesiology and pain medicine, the reasons for this disparity have not been fully explored. Moreover, it is also unknown whether the minority of female physicians who select pain medicine as a subspecialty gravitate toward an academic or a private-practice path. To address the existing gender disparity, it is necessary to explore the landscape of interventional pain medicine in both academic and private practices and understand pain physicians' beliefs and sentiments regarding their subspecialty.
学术麻醉学中的性别偏见是众所周知的。女性不仅在该领域中占少数,而且在领导层中代表性不足。据报道,造成这种代表性不足的原因包括职业发展的障碍、缺乏指导以及薪酬差异等。介入性疼痛是麻醉学的一个具有竞争力的程序亚专业,它受到了这种差异的影响。根据 ACGME 的一份报告,该报告按女性受训者的数量对医学亚专业进行了排序,从 2008 年到 2016 年,疼痛医学在所有学科中都排在倒数四分之一。
为了更好地了解女性在疼痛医学领域的医生的情况,我们进行了这项调查,以了解该主题的相关知识以及仍未解答的问题。
本研究是对当前文献的综述,旨在总结和描述女性在疼痛医学领域的概况。
所有文献综述和手稿准备均在耶鲁大学医学院进行。
我们使用 PubMed、Scopus 和 Cochrane 数据库对“性别差异”、“疼痛医学”和“麻醉学”这三个术语进行了全面搜索,将搜索范围限制在 2000 年以后,以获取该主题的最新文献。我们的初步搜索检索到 38 篇文章。所有与这篇观点文章相关的文章都被整理在一起。下面讨论了现有的文献。
女性在介入性疼痛方面代表性不足。女性疼痛医生的数量稀少,而且不太可能很快得到改善,因为虽然研究生医学教育认证委员会(Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education)的疼痛研究员项目数量继续增加,但女性受训者仅占所有疼痛医学研究员的 22-25%。此外,尽管有研究比较了学术医院中男性介入性疼痛教师与女性同行的数量,并分别显示出从 71.84-82%到 18-28.52%的比例,但没有研究真正探讨了私人执业女性医生的情况。患者更喜欢并拥有与自己种族和民族相似的医生,而且体验更好。事实上,对女性临床医生的偏好和缺乏与延迟寻求护理和不良健康结果有关。性别差异造成的倦怠和人员流失的后果,尤其是在疼痛医学等领域,不能被低估。
综述可能不全面,可能没有包括相关研究。
尽管学术界在麻醉学和疼痛医学方面的性别差异有据可查,但造成这种差异的原因尚未得到充分探讨。此外,选择疼痛医学作为亚专业的少数女性医生是否倾向于选择学术或私人实践道路也不得而知。为了解决现有的性别差异,有必要探索学术和私人实践中介入性疼痛医学的概况,并了解疼痛医生对其亚专业的信念和感受。