The Daily Telegraph

Female doctors give women heart victims a better chance

- By Daily Telegraph Reporter

WOMEN are more likely to survive a heart attack if they are treated by a female doctor in hospital, a study has shown.

Scientists in the US reviewed nearly 582,000 heart attack cases in Florida over a period of 19 years.

They found that female patients admitted to a hospital emergency room (ER) had a significan­tly higher chance of survival when another woman was in charge of their treatment.

Their chances were also improved if treated by a male doctor who had a lot of female colleagues in his team.

Dr Seth Carnahan, from Washington University in St Louis, said: “You have highly trained experts with life or death on the line, and yet the gender match between the physician and the patient seems to matter a great deal.”

It’s unclear if the same trend may be replicated in British hospitals.

The researcher­s trawled through anonymous patient data from Florida hospitals from 1991 to 2010, measuring factors such as age, race and medical history.

Even after taking these factors into account, they found that female patients were less likely to survive heart attacks than male patients.

The gender survival difference was highest under male doctors.

When patients were treated by men, 12.6 per cent of men died compared with 13.3 per cent of women – a difference of 0.7 per cent.

But the gender gap closed more than three-fold to 0.2 per cent when female physicians took charge of treatment. In this case, 11.8 per cent of men died compared with 12 per cent of women.

Dr Carnahan said: “Our work corroborat­es prior research showing that female doctors tend to produce better patient outcomes than male doctors.

“The novel part of what we are doing is showing that the benefit of having a female doctor is particular­ly stark for a female patient.”

The team found that female survival rates rose as the percentage of female doctors working in the ER increased, especially if the physician in charge was male. The findings are reported in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

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