Regina Leader-Post

U.S. survey shows gender bias among doctors

Medical profession­als of both genders link the word ‘career’ with men

- TAMARA MATHIAS

Researcher­s who examined implicit and explicit gender biases in the U.S. medical community found that profession­als of both genders are more likely to associate the word “career” with men and the word “family” with women.

And U.S. surgeons broadly see surgery as a man’s career and family medicine as a woman’s field, the researcher­s also found.

It’s important to be aware of such stereotypi­ng among doctors and other medical profession­als in order to minimize the potential effect, the researcher­s say.

Dr. Arghavan Salles and colleagues analyzed responses collected over a decade from 43,000 health care profession­als who took a “gender-career” associatio­n test, a common tool used to measure unconsciou­s and conscious biases that influence interactio­ns with others.

Half of the profession­als were over age 32. Although roughly four out of five were women, overall the responses showed conscious and unconsciou­s biases associatin­g men with “career” and women with “family,” Salles’ team found.

Next, the researcher­s recruited 131 doctors attending a surgeons’ meeting in 2017 to take a “gender-specialty” test that assessed biases related to the medical specialtie­s of surgery and family medicine. In this group, half the participan­ts were over age 42 and 35 per cent were women.

Both male and female surgeons held implicit and explicit biases associatin­g men with surgery and women with family medicine, the test showed. In both tests, however, women were less likely to explicitly make these associatio­ns, the authors note in JAMA Network Open.

Salles, herself a surgeon, said the study came about because she was interested in collecting preliminar­y data on the extent of gender bias in health care.

“I’d seen a lot of the ways in which women are treated differentl­y from men, both when I was a resident, and as a faculty member,” she told Reuters Health.

“For years people have said, ‘Well, we just haven’t had enough women going into medicine, so we just need to wait awhile and then we’ll see that those numbers will go up,’” said Salles, who was at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo. when she worked on the study and hasn’t yet started her new position.

But, she added, “Women have been more than 45 per cent of every entering class across this country since the late 1990s ... and yet only 16 per cent of deans of medical schools are women, so there’s something else going on there.”

She doesn’t think the results reflect only what people see in the real world.

It’s true there are fewer women surgeons, “so of course we don’t really expect women to be surgeons, so ... then we have fewer women surgeons,” Salles said. “There’s definitely (a cycle) going on there.”

But there are also fewer women than men in family medicine, she points out.

Sociologis­t Jennifer Sheridan of the Women in Science & Engineerin­g Leadership Institute at the University of Wisconsin-madison, who was not involved in either test, cautioned that implicit bias is an ordinary phenomenon and “does not actually tell us whether health care profession­als and/or surgeons are acting with bias.”

“This study merely documents the presence of biases that most people have, and it suggests that the bias could affect things we care about,” Sheridan told Reuters Health.

Sheridan thinks the gender-specialty test may have been unreliable. “It seems to me that choosing family medicine as the discipline opposite surgery might not have been a fair choice, given the word ‘family’ is right in (the) name of the category,” she said.another limitation of the study, the researcher­s acknowledg­e, is that they didn’t know the specialtie­s of the health care profession­als who took the gender-career associatio­n test. Still, while her team agrees on the need for further study, Salles believes the current results could inform hiring managers about the need to check for bias when making appointmen­t decisions.

“What I think is the standard in medicine ... is trying to assess whether someone is like you or not,” she said. As long as people keep doing that in job interviews, she added, “then we’re going to keep selecting for the same types of people.”

 ?? FREDERICK FLORIN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? According to a group of researcher­s, it’s important to be well aware of any stereotypi­ng and gender biases that exist among doctors and other medical profession­als.
FREDERICK FLORIN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES According to a group of researcher­s, it’s important to be well aware of any stereotypi­ng and gender biases that exist among doctors and other medical profession­als.

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