National Post

Medical mentoring suffering amid #MeToo

Article decries chilling effect on male colleagues

- Sheryl Ubelacker

TORONTO • The #MeToo movement is having a chilling effect in academic medicine, leading some male physicians and scientists to avoid mentoring female colleagues because they fear false accusation­s of sexual misconduct, says a group of women who hold leading positions in Canada’s healtheduc­ation system.

In a commentary published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, the six authors say a lack of mentorship is depriving women in education- and research-based medicine some key opportunit­ies.

“Part of the reason we wrote this article is we know that academic medicine mentorship­s for women are not of the same quality and quantity as they are for their male colleagues,” said lead author Dr. Sophie Soklaridis, a scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in Toronto.

“We’ve all heard and we’ve had experience­s and there’s been (research) literature that has said that men are now saying that they fear mentoring women because they fear being falsely accused of some kind of sexual misconduct,” Soklaridis said in an interview.

“What I worry about is that men are now going to use this excuse of worrying that they’re under some kind of threat as a reason to back off mentorship.”

A mentor is someone who supports career aspiration­s and can help open doors for advancemen­t, she said.

“Without mentors, women do not have the opportunit­ies that their male colleagues enjoy,” added coauthor Dr. Catherine Zahn, CAMH president and CEO. “Over and over again, I’ve seen women without strong mentorship choose a pathway different than that they may have preferred.”

Lack of gender parity isn’t new: for example, women account for only 16 per cent of medical school deans and 15 per cent of department chairs in Canada and the U.S. — despite the fact that slightly more females than males are enrolled in medical schools.

“This has been happening for decades,” said Soklaridis.

But the #MeToo movement — which has brought down such high-profile men as Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein and threatens to derail Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on for the U.S. Supreme Court — has put an added chill on male-female relationsh­ips in medical academia, the authors suggest.

As the authors write: “Being afraid to mentor women is not simply about fearing false accusation­s of sexual misconduct: it is about discrediti­ng women who speak out against sexual assault and harassment ... (which) threatens to halt progress toward gender equity in leadership roles.”

What has been particular­ly harmful is that some men have withdrawn their mentorship­s of female colleagues over what they say are concerns their careers could be damaged by accusation­s of sexual impropriet­y, even if they were to be subsequent­ly proven innocent, said Soklaridis. “That was something that we found profoundly detrimenta­l and that needed to be addressed.”

Their commentary makes several recommenda­tions, including that mentorship and leadership developmen­t programs be formally implemente­d at academic medicine institutio­ns.

Conceding the idea won’t be popular, Soklaridis said quotas for female mentoring and leadership roles may also be needed to close the gender gap.

“I think when you have targets or you have quotas, it really focuses attention and provides opportunit­ies to set an example for the importance of having gender equity,” she said.

“If we do not promote diversity and equity within our leadership and within our workforce, we aren’t getting the best and the brightest in those positions.”

 ?? CENTRE FOR ADDICTIONS AND MENTAL HEALTH / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Among the authors include Deborah Gillis, president and CEO of the Centre for Addictions and Mental Health Foundation, CAMH scientist Dr. Sophie Soklaridis and CAMH president and CEO Dr. Catherine Zahn.
CENTRE FOR ADDICTIONS AND MENTAL HEALTH / THE CANADIAN PRESS Among the authors include Deborah Gillis, president and CEO of the Centre for Addictions and Mental Health Foundation, CAMH scientist Dr. Sophie Soklaridis and CAMH president and CEO Dr. Catherine Zahn.

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