Ho Sarah J, Jiang Jasmine W, Yu Catherine T, Xu Emily, Yuen Eunice Y
Yale School of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
JAMA Netw Open. 2025 May 1;8(5):e2512271. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.12271.
When their proportion of faculty positions are accounted for, Asian American women are the most underrepresented group among academic medicine leadership. Despite the importance of diversity and representation in academic medicine leadership, no study to date has explored the specific factors that hinder or support Asian American women's advancement to leadership roles in academic medicine.
To characterize perceptions of facilitators and barriers to academic medicine leadership for Asian American women.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: In this qualitative study, Asian American female residents were interviewed between December 1, 2023, and April 30, 2024, using an online video platform. Data were analyzed using thematic content analysis. Eligible participants were recruited through word of mouth, social media groups, cold emailing, and snowball sampling. A purposive sampling strategy ensured diversity in ethnicity, geographic locations of past and current institutions, postgraduate years, and specialties.
Key themes related to the perceptions of Asian American female residents on facilitators and barriers to leadership in academic medicine.
Fifteen participants (age range, 25-32 years) who self-identified as female and Asian American (3 [20%] Asian Indian, 6 [40%] Chinese, 2 [13%] Korean, 1 [7%] Punjabi, 1 [7%] Taiwanese, and 2 [13%] Vietnamese) were interviewed. Participants were enrolled in residency programs geographically distributed across the US. Training levels ranged from postgraduate year 1 to postgraduate year 6, spanning 9 residency program specialties. This analysis revealed 4 key themes: (1) role models of leadership, especially the representation of Asian American women in leadership positions; (2) multifactorial development of professional identity, specifically through peers, mentors, and formalized institutional programming; (3) the othering nature of workplaces and institutional cultures, including the exclusionary "boys' club," discrimination from patients and colleagues, and burden of familial responsibilities imposed on women; and (4) leadership discordance, including differing ideas of leadership and sociocultural perceptions of Asian American women influencing perceptions of leadership potential.
This qualitative study of Asian American female resident physicians' perceptions of facilitators and barriers to academic medicine leadership found 4 key themes and identified opportunities for intervention, paving the way for enhanced representation of Asian American women in academic medicine leadership.
在考虑到其在教职岗位中的占比后,亚裔美国女性是学术医学领导层中代表性最不足的群体。尽管多样性和代表性在学术医学领导层中很重要,但迄今为止,尚无研究探讨阻碍或支持亚裔美国女性在学术医学领域晋升至领导岗位的具体因素。
描述亚裔美国女性对学术医学领导力促进因素和障碍的看法。
设计、背景和参与者:在这项定性研究中,于2023年12月1日至2024年4月30日期间使用在线视频平台对亚裔美国女性住院医师进行了访谈。采用主题内容分析法对数据进行分析。通过口碑、社交媒体群组、冷邮件和滚雪球抽样招募符合条件的参与者。目的抽样策略确保了种族、过去和当前机构的地理位置、研究生年级和专业的多样性。
与亚裔美国女性住院医师对学术医学领导力促进因素和障碍的看法相关的关键主题。
采访了15名自我认定为女性且为亚裔美国人的参与者(年龄范围为25 - 32岁)(3名[20%]印度裔、6名[40%]华裔、2名[13%]韩裔、1名[7%]旁遮普裔、1名[7%]台湾裔、2名[13%]越南裔)。参与者参加了分布在美国各地的住院医师培训项目。培训水平从研究生一年级到研究生六年级不等,涵盖9个住院医师培训项目专业。该分析揭示了4个关键主题:(1)领导榜样,尤其是亚裔美国女性担任领导职务的代表性;(2)职业身份的多因素发展,特别是通过同行、导师和正式的机构项目;(3)工作场所和机构文化的他者化性质,包括排他性的“男性俱乐部”、来自患者和同事的歧视以及强加给女性的家庭责任负担;(4)领导不一致,包括不同的领导观念以及亚裔美国女性的社会文化观念影响对领导潜力的看法。
这项关于亚裔美国女性住院医师对学术医学领导力促进因素和障碍看法的定性研究发现了4个关键主题,并确定了干预机会,为增加亚裔美国女性在学术医学领导层中的代表性铺平了道路。