Crozier Mitchell, McVicar Jason, Lorello Gianni R, Mottiar Miriam, Wilson C Ruth, Orser Beverley A
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Ottawa and The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Department of Anesthesiology, Royal Inland Hospital, Kamloops, BC, Canada.
Can J Anaesth. 2025 May;72(5):791-800. doi: 10.1007/s12630-025-02949-9. Epub 2025 May 2.
According to an analysis of data from the Canadian Institutes for Health Information (CIHI) National Physician Database, the proportion of female anesthesia physicians is substantially lower than the proportion of female physicians in the total physician population. The goal of this study was to identify trends in female representation in the major subgroups of anesthesia providers, including specialists certified by the Royal College of Physician and Surgeons of Canada (RCPSC), international medical graduates, and family physician anesthetists (FPAs).
We examined the sex distribution of the existing physician workforce, including anesthesia providers working in urban and rural Canada, using the CIHI National Physician Database (1996-2018). We also examined the sex distribution of physicians entering the workforce using the Canadian Post-MD Education Registry database and calculated descriptive statistics.
The proportion of female physicians increased steadily over time in all groups; nevertheless, the numbers of female FPAs and rural anesthesia providers continued to lag relative to all Canadian physicians (9.4%, 9.4%, and 26.7%, respectively, in 1996; 18.7%, 21.1%, and 42.1%, respectively, in 2018). Of the graduates from RCPSC training programs in 1996, 28% were female, whereas by 2018, 33.5% of graduates were female.
Female physicians were underrepresented in all subgroups, but the proportions were lowest among FPAs and rural physicians. Given that greater sex diversity in clinical teams is associated with better outcomes, and in light of ongoing workforce shortages, the barriers that prevent female physicians from entering and/or remaining in the anesthesia workforce need to be understood and ameliorated.
根据加拿大卫生信息研究所(CIHI)国家医师数据库的数据分析,女性麻醉医师的比例显著低于全体医师群体中女性医师的比例。本研究的目的是确定麻醉提供者主要亚组中女性代表比例的趋势,包括加拿大皇家内科医师和外科医师学院(RCPSC)认证的专科医师、国际医学毕业生以及家庭医师麻醉师(FPA)。
我们使用CIHI国家医师数据库(1996 - 2018年)研究了现有医师劳动力的性别分布,包括在加拿大城乡工作的麻醉提供者。我们还使用加拿大毕业后医学教育注册数据库研究了进入劳动力队伍的医师的性别分布,并计算了描述性统计数据。
所有组中女性医师的比例随时间稳步增加;然而,女性FPA和农村麻醉提供者的数量相对于所有加拿大医师仍然滞后(1996年分别为9.4%、9.4%和26.7%;2018年分别为18.7%、21.1%和42.1%)。1996年RCPSC培训项目的毕业生中,28%为女性,而到2018年,33.5%的毕业生为女性。
女性医师在所有亚组中的代表性都不足,但在FPA和农村医师中比例最低。鉴于临床团队中更大的性别多样性与更好的结果相关,并且鉴于持续的劳动力短缺,需要了解并改善阻碍女性医师进入和/或留在麻醉劳动力队伍中的障碍。