Mujahed Tala, Ofori-Atta Blessing S, Codden Rachel, Greene Tom, Dudley Nanette, Kadish Howard, Drapkin Zachary
Acad Med. 2025 Jun 1;100(6):747-754. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000005976. Epub 2025 Jan 22.
Several studies have demonstrated that female physicians within specific specialties are compensated less than their male counterparts. Academic institutions seek to address this using Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) data for benchmarking and starting salary standardization. However, few studies address whether there is an association between percentage of women across specialties and mean salary for each specialty. The purpose of this study was to examine whether there is an association between mean salary and percentage of women in various specialties.
This cross-sectional study used AAMC Faculty Salary Report data for fiscal year 2022. Surveys were sent to 155 U.S. accredited medical schools, of which 153 schools participated (99% response rate). Univariable and multivariable analyses were performed to assess the association between mean specialty salary, calculated as the weighted mean of male and female salaries for each specialty, and the percentage of women in each specialty using a generalized linear gamma mixed model.
Analysis using data from 124,480 full-time faculty at 153 accredited U.S. medical schools indicated that as the percentage of women in a specialty increases, mean salary decreases. This finding was true for all specialties ( r = -0.65), medical specialties ( r = -0.83), pediatric specialties ( r = -0.80), and surgical specialties ( r = -0.73). Multivariable analysis accounting for rank, pediatric vs nonpediatric specialties, procedural vs nonprocedural vs mixed specialties, and years of training showed that every 10% increase in percentage of women in a specialty was associated with a 7% decrease in salary independent of other factors.
An inverse correlation between percentage of women in a specialty and mean salary for that specialty was observed even when controlling for confounding factors. This trend is worth noting because AAMC data are often used as a benchmark to establish physician starting salaries.
多项研究表明,特定专业领域的女医生薪酬低于男医生。学术机构试图利用美国医学院协会(AAMC)的数据进行基准对比和起始薪资标准化来解决这一问题。然而,很少有研究探讨各专业领域女性比例与每个专业领域平均薪资之间是否存在关联。本研究的目的是检验不同专业领域的平均薪资与女性比例之间是否存在关联。
这项横断面研究使用了2022财年AAMC教师薪资报告数据。调查发送给了155所美国认可的医学院校,其中153所学校参与了调查(回复率为99%)。采用广义线性伽马混合模型进行单变量和多变量分析,以评估每个专业领域的平均薪资(计算为该专业领域男性和女性薪资的加权平均值)与该专业领域女性比例之间的关联。
对153所美国认可医学院校的124,480名全职教师的数据进行分析表明,随着某一专业领域女性比例的增加,平均薪资会降低。这一发现适用于所有专业领域(r = -0.65)、医学专业领域(r = -0.83)、儿科专业领域(r = -0.80)和外科专业领域(r = -0.73)。考虑到职称、儿科与非儿科专业领域、程序性与非程序性与混合性专业领域以及培训年限的多变量分析表明,某一专业领域女性比例每增加10%,与薪资独立于其他因素而降低7%相关。
即使在控制混杂因素的情况下,也观察到某一专业领域女性比例与该专业领域平均薪资之间存在负相关。这一趋势值得注意,因为AAMC数据常被用作确定医生起始薪资的基准。