Business Standard

Women doctors earn much less than men in US

- REBECCA GREENFIELD April 29 BLOOMBERG

America’s women doctors aren’t earning less than men because of the fields they’ve chosen. Even women in some of the highest-paying medical specialtie­s make much less than their male colleagues.

Women vascular surgeons make $89,000 a year, or 20 per cent, less than their male counterpar­ts, according to a survey of 36,000 doctor salaries by Doximity, a profession­al networking site for doctors. Female cardiologi­sts earn $76,000, or 18 per cent, less than their male peers. Hematology has the smallest wage gap, with women earning 14 per cent— $51,643—less than men with the same experience.

The survey — which controlled for doctors’ ages, hours worked, and region— found a 27 per cent wage gap nationally, across all specialtie­s and geographie­s. When it zeroed in on various specialtie­s, that gap narrowed but persisted. A handful of fields, including some of the best-paying ones, had wage gaps of around 20 per cent.

The doctor wage gap is well-documented, with some studies finding that male doctors make almost 40 per cent more than female doctors. One common explanatio­n has been that women go into lower-paying fields, such as primary care and pediatrics. The Doximity survey appears to refute that suggestion.

“In no markets or specialiti­es did we find that women make more than men, which is fairly surprising and upsetting,” said Chris Whaley, an economist and one of the study's authors. “We might have expected in at least one market, women would make more than men, but we didn’t find that. We still found a wage gap.”

As more women become doctors and choose higherpayi­ng specialtie­s, the gap has closed somewhat—but not entirely.

Women make up 18 per cent of the orthopedis­ts under the age of 35 and 16 per cent of urologists in that age group, compared with nine per cent of orthopedis­ts and 10 per cent of urologists overall, a recent Medscape survey found. Such trends have nudged the pay gap for younger doctors in all fields down to around 18 per cent, compared with 36 per cent for doctors aged 35 to 44, that survey found.

Still, the influx of women into medicine doesn’t counteract other factors at play. “We do know, from a variety of other settings and industries, the wage gap has been linked to factors ranging from outright discrimina­tion to difference­s in trainings and background­s and salary negotiatio­ns,” said Whaley.

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