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美国新兴的骨科运动医学专业人才队伍在性别、种族和民族方面的多样性有限。

Sex, Race, and Ethnic Diversity of the Emerging U.S. Orthopaedic Sports Medicine Workforce Is Limited.

作者信息

Silvestre Jason, Slone Harris S, Newton William N, Kolade Oluwadamilola O, Kelly John D

机构信息

Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.A..

Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.A.

出版信息

Arthroscopy. 2025 Jul;41(7):2524-2532. doi: 10.1016/j.arthro.2024.10.043. Epub 2024 Nov 7.

Abstract

PURPOSE

To analyze the demographics and trends of orthopaedic surgeons entering the U.S. orthopaedic sports medicine workforce over the past decade.

METHODS

This was a cross-sectional study of allopathic medical students, orthopaedic surgery residents, and orthopaedic sports medicine fellows in the United States (2013-2022) that leveraged data from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and American Medical Association. Disparities in demographic representation between orthopaedic sports medicine fellows and the 2020 U.S. population census were quantified with participation-to-prevalence ratios (PPRs). A PPR between 0.8 and 1.2 was classified as equivalent representation and a PPR<0.8 was classified as under-representation, relative to the U.S.

RESULTS

The representation of female, Hispanic, Black, and Asian trainees decreased at each stage of the training pipeline to orthopaedic sports medicine fellowship training. In contrast, the representation of White trainees increased at each stage of the training pipeline. Over the study period, there were modest increases in female (9.9% to 12.6%) and Hispanic (1.2% to 1.7%) trainee representation in orthopaedic sports medicine. In contrast, Asian (16.6% to 5.6%) and Black (5.1% to 1.9%) trainee representation decreased. Relative to the US population, female (PPR = 0.22), Black (PPR = 0.30), Hispanic (PPR = 0.19), Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander (PPR = 0.01), and Native American/Alaskan Native (PPR = 0.00) trainees were under-represented. In contrast, male (PPR = 1.79), Asian (PPR = 1.96), and White (PPR = 1.36) trainees were over-represented in orthopaedic sports medicine.

CONCLUSIONS

There is limited diversity in the emerging orthopaedic sports medicine workforce relative to the U.S.

POPULATION

Improvements in the representation of female, Black, and Hispanic trainees in orthopaedic sports medicine has been marginal relative to trends observed at U.S. allopathic medical schools.

CLINICAL RELEVANCE

Promoting diversity and inclusion in the orthopaedic sports medicine workforce can create more surgical provider options for diverse patient populations in the United States.

摘要

目的

分析过去十年进入美国骨科运动医学领域的骨科医生的人口统计学特征和趋势。

方法

这是一项对美国(2013 - 2022年)的全科医学学生、骨科住院医师和骨科运动医学研究员进行的横断面研究,利用了毕业后医学教育认证委员会和美国医学协会的数据。通过参与率与患病率之比(PPR)对骨科运动医学研究员与2020年美国人口普查之间的人口统计学代表性差异进行量化。相对于美国,PPR在0.8至1.2之间被归类为代表性相当,PPR<0.8被归类为代表性不足。

结果

在通往骨科运动医学研究员培训的培训流程的每个阶段,女性、西班牙裔、黑人及亚裔学员的代表性都在下降。相比之下,白人学员的代表性在培训流程的每个阶段都在增加。在研究期间,骨科运动医学领域女性学员(从9.9%增至12.6%)和西班牙裔学员(从1.2%增至1.7%)的代表性有适度增加。相比之下,亚裔学员(从16.6%降至5.6%)和黑人学员(从5.1%降至1.9%)的代表性下降。相对于美国人口,女性学员(PPR = 0.22)、黑人学员(PPR = 0.30)、西班牙裔学员(PPR = 0.19)、夏威夷原住民/太平洋岛民学员(PPR = 0.01)和美国原住民/阿拉斯加原住民学员(PPR = 0.00)的代表性不足。相比之下,男性学员(PPR = 1.79)、亚裔学员(PPR = 1.96)和白人学员(PPR = 1.36)在骨科运动医学领域的代表性过高。

结论

相对于美国人口,新兴的骨科运动医学领域劳动力的多样性有限。

人群

相对于美国全科医学医学院观察到的趋势,骨科运动医学领域女性、黑人和西班牙裔学员代表性的改善微乎其微。

临床意义

促进骨科运动医学领域劳动力的多样性和包容性可为美国不同患者群体创造更多手术提供者选择。

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