Jayaram Rahul H, Futela Dheeman, Day Wesley, Malhotra Ajay, Grauer Jonathan N
From the Yale School of Medicine (Mr. Jayaram); the Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging (Dr. Futela and Dr. Malhotra), Yale School of Medicine; and the Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation (Mr. Day and Dr. Grauer), Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev. 2025 May 14;9(5). doi: 10.5435/JAAOSGlobal-D-25-00112. eCollection 2025 May 1.
The overall trends in academic orthopaedic surgery compensation are not well studied. The aim of this study was to assess trends and distribution of academic orthopaedic surgery financial compensation and consider in relation to academic rank, sex, and race/ethnicity.
The 2017 to 2023 American Association of Medical Colleges Faculty Salary Surveys were used, which collect information for full-time faculty at US medical schools. Financial compensation data for orthopaedic faculty, across subspecialities, were stratified by year, academic rank, sex, race/ethnicity, and geographic region. Trends in median, 25th, and 75th percentile compensation were assessed.
Responses for 2,601 faculty members across orthopaedic departments were available, including 82 instructors, 1,176 assistant professors, 668 associate professors, 487 full professors, 104 chiefs (lead a division within the larger department), and 84 chairs (head an entire academic department). Median faculty compensation increased on an average of 1.80% to 6.93%, with the greatest increase at the chief and chair levels and smaller increases for instructors and professors of varying rank. From 2017 to 2013, women were consistently compensated less than men at all ranks except chairs. In 2023, women in academic orthopaedic surgery made less cents-on-the-dollar relative to men of equal rank across all ranks. Asian assistant professors made 0.90 cents-on-the-dollar, and Hispanic/Latino and Black/African American assistant professors made 0.87 cents-on-the-dollar compared with White faculty of equal rank. However, among professors, these groups had higher median compensation (1.06 to 1.1 cents-on-the-dollar) compared with White professors. The geographic variations of compensation were within the range of 15k for assistant professors, 32k for associate professors, 196k for chiefs, 95k for professors, and 83k for chairs.
This study summarizes trends of academic orthopaedic faculty compensation and shows salaries barely keeping pace with inflation and persistent compensation inequities, which highlights the need for fair, transparent compensation models and additional studies of factors impacting physician compensation.
骨科手术学术薪酬的总体趋势尚未得到充分研究。本研究的目的是评估骨科手术学术薪酬的趋势和分布,并考虑其与学术职级、性别和种族/民族的关系。
使用了2017年至2023年美国医学院协会教师薪资调查,该调查收集了美国医学院全职教师的信息。骨科教师的财务薪酬数据按亚专业、年份、学术职级、性别、种族/民族和地理区域进行分层。评估了薪酬中位数、第25百分位数和第75百分位数的趋势。
获得了2601名骨科系教师的回复,包括82名讲师、1176名助理教授、668名副教授、487名正教授、104名科室主任(领导大科室中的一个部门)和84名系主任(领导整个学术部门)。教师薪酬中位数平均增长了1.80%至6.93%,其中科室主任和系主任级别增长最大,不同职级的讲师和教授增长较小。从2017年到2023年,除系主任外,所有职级的女性薪酬一直低于男性。2023年,骨科手术学术领域的女性相对于同等职级的男性,每美元收入的薪酬更低。与同等职级的白人教师相比,亚裔助理教授每美元收入0.90美元,西班牙裔/拉丁裔和黑人/非裔美国助理教授每美元收入0.87美元。然而,在教授中,这些群体的薪酬中位数(每美元收入1.06至1.1美元)高于白人教授。助理教授的薪酬地理差异在15000美元以内,副教授为32000美元,科室主任为196000美元,教授为95000美元,系主任为83000美元。
本研究总结了骨科手术学术教师薪酬的趋势,表明薪资几乎跟不上通货膨胀,薪酬不平等现象持续存在,这凸显了需要公平、透明的薪酬模式以及对影响医生薪酬因素的更多研究。