Newsom Keeley D, Akhavan Arya A, Tran Khoa D, Chen Wendy, Peters Blair R, Borschel Gregory H
Division of Plastic Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
Division of Plastic Surgery, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, New York.
Plast Surg (Oakv). 2025 May;33(2):329-337. doi: 10.1177/22925503231208449. Epub 2023 Oct 23.
: The LGBTQ+ community faces discrimination within the workplace, with growing evidence emerging about the mistreatment of LGBTQ+ surgeon trainees. The purpose of this study was to better understand the experiences of LGBTQ+ surgeons in plastic and reconstructive surgery (PRS). A web-based survey was made available to all plastic surgeons who identified as LGBTQ+ across the US and Canada from October 2021 to November 2022. The questionnaire used validated tools assessing "outness" and microaggressions, as well as rates of censorship of speech and/or mannerisms and experiences of discrimination. Outcomes were measured as frequencies and analyzed as a function of location (US vs Canada), gender identity (transgender and gender-diverse (TGD) versus cisgender), and level of training (attending vs in-training). Qualitative responses were also recorded. A total of 43 self-identified LGBTQ+ individuals engaged with the survey, 38 of which completed it (88%). Nearly all (96.8%) reported experiencing heteronormative microaggressions, 36.7% reported discrimination from plastic surgery attendings, and 73.3% censor themselves around Plastic Surgery attendings. TGD respondents were more likely to have experienced discrimination than cisgender respondents ( < .01). One-third (33%) of respondents indicated that they hesitate to be out at their institution for fear of bias and/or discrimination. LGBTQ+ plastic and reconstructive surgeons reported a significant amount of microaggressions, self-censorship, and discrimination while at work, and these experiences varied as a function of level of training and gender identity. PRS should strive to eliminate these mistreatments, educate its workforce, and address LGBTQ+ underrepresentation within the field.
LGBTQ+群体在工作场所面临歧视,越来越多的证据表明LGBTQ+外科住院医师受到了不公正对待。本研究的目的是更好地了解LGBTQ+整形外科医生的经历。2021年10月至2022年11月期间,面向美国和加拿大所有自认为是LGBTQ+的整形外科医生开展了一项基于网络的调查。问卷使用了经过验证的工具来评估“公开程度”和微侵犯行为,以及言语和/或行为方式的审查率和歧视经历。结果以频率衡量,并根据地点(美国与加拿大)、性别认同(跨性别和性别多样化(TGD)与顺性别)以及培训水平(主治医生与住院医生)进行分析。还记录了定性回答。共有43名自认为是LGBTQ+的人参与了调查,其中38人完成了调查(88%)。几乎所有人(96.8%)报告称经历过异性恋规范的微侵犯行为,36.7%的人报告受到整形外科主治医生的歧视,73.3%的人在整形外科主治医生面前会自我审查。TGD受访者比顺性别受访者更有可能经历歧视(<0.01)。三分之一(33%)的受访者表示,由于担心偏见和/或歧视,他们在所在机构不愿公开自己的身份。LGBTQ+整形外科医生报告称,工作时存在大量微侵犯行为、自我审查和歧视,这些经历因培训水平和性别认同而异。整形外科应努力消除这些不公正对待,对其员工进行教育,并解决该领域LGBTQ+代表不足的问题。