Offiah Gozie, Schofield Susie J, Rees Charlotte E
Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI), University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dublin, Ireland.
Centre for Medical Education, School of Medicine, University of Dundee, Dundee, Scotland, UK.
Med Educ. 2025 Oct;59(10):1067-1078. doi: 10.1111/medu.15726. Epub 2025 May 21.
Workplace diversity improves outcomes, yet surgical cultures have long been identified as a deterrent for women considering surgical careers due to male-dominated traditions. Our study explores the impact of surgical cultures and their influence on gender through the analytical lens of Hofstede's cultural dimensions framework. We apply this in a novel way to gain deeper insights into how masculinity and other cultural dimensions intersect.
For this qualitative study-part of a larger study exploring gender in surgery-we conducted semi-structured interviews with 29 female surgeons, 18 male and female colleagues of female surgeons (surgeons, anaesthetists, nurses and physician associates) and 13 patients of female surgeons. We analysed the data using framework analysis, with surgical cultures being identified as a central theme. We drew on Hofstede's cultural dimensions theory to deeply interrogate how cultural dimensions intersect to shape the surgical environment, thereby disadvantaging women.
Competition, achievement and heroism associated with masculinity were thought to be pervasive and hindered progression, particularly for female surgeons. Unequal power distributions were reported to lead to female surgeons working harder to earn respect. Female overseas doctors narrated the challenges of being respected by male colleagues from their own collectivist countries. Long-standing 'old boys' club' traditions associated with uncertainty avoidance were thought to maintain the gendered status quo. Long-term orientation and restraint were reported to impact female surgeons with career breaks. However, our analysis indicated novel interplays between masculinity and the other five cultural dimensions, with some dimensions overlapping (e.g., long-term orientation and restraint) and others contradicting (e.g., power distance and collectivist values).
This study, drawing on Hofstede's cultural dimensions, illustrates the complexity of interacting cultural dimensions, serving to maintain inequities for female surgeons. We therefore provide recommendations for multiple interventions to enable surgical culture change, based on these intersecting six cultural dimensions.
职场多元化能改善工作成果,但由于男性主导的传统,外科文化长期以来一直被视为阻碍女性从事外科职业的因素。我们的研究通过霍夫斯泰德文化维度框架这一分析视角,探讨外科文化的影响及其对性别的作用。我们以一种新颖的方式应用该框架,以更深入地了解男性气质与其他文化维度是如何相互交织的。
作为一项探索外科领域性别问题的大型研究的一部分,本定性研究对29名女外科医生、18名女外科医生的男女同事(外科医生、麻醉师、护士和医师助理)以及13名女外科医生的患者进行了半结构化访谈。我们使用框架分析法对数据进行分析,将外科文化确定为核心主题。我们借鉴霍夫斯泰德的文化维度理论,深入探究文化维度如何相互交织以塑造外科环境,从而使女性处于不利地位。
与男性气质相关的竞争、成就和英雄主义被认为普遍存在并阻碍了职业发展,尤其是对女外科医生而言。据报告,权力分配不均导致女外科医生需更加努力工作以赢得尊重。海外女医生讲述了在自己的集体主义国家中获得男同事尊重所面临的挑战。与避免不确定性相关的长期存在的“老男孩俱乐部”传统被认为维持了性别现状。据报告,长期导向和克制对有职业间断的女外科医生产生影响。然而,我们的分析表明男性气质与其他五个文化维度之间存在新的相互作用,一些维度相互重叠(如长期导向和克制),而其他维度则相互矛盾(如权力距离和集体主义价值观)。
本研究借鉴霍夫斯泰德的文化维度,阐明了相互作用的文化维度的复杂性,这种复杂性导致女外科医生面临不公平待遇。因此,我们基于这六个相互交织的文化维度,为促成外科文化变革的多种干预措施提供建议。