4.5 Article

Specialty Gender Composition and Prevalence of Physician Harassment

期刊

JOURNAL OF WOMENS HEALTH
卷 32, 期 4, 页码 409-415

出版社

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/jwh.2022.0380

关键词

gender composition; harassment; medical specialties; gender equity; physician workforce

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This research examines the relationship between the gender composition of medical specialties and physicians' workplace harassment experience. It found that women physicians are at a higher risk of workplace harassment than men, and a greater representation of women in a specialty is associated with fewer harassment experiences and narrower gender gaps in harassment.
Background: Women physicians remain a minority in most medical specialties and are at higher risk of workplace harassment than men. This research examines the relationship between a medical specialty's gender composition and physicians' workplace harassment experience.Materials and Methods: We used the Association of American Medical Colleges' National Sample Survey of Physicians 2019 (n = 6000). Participants self-reported harassment experiences in the 12 months preceding the survey, including threats of physical harm, physical harm, offensive and sexist remarks, and unwanted sexual advances from patients and coworkers. We used data from the American Medical Association to determine medical specialties' gender composition. We used multiple logistic regression to assess the relationship between harassment experiences and specialty gender composition.Results: Women and men physicians reported threats and harm at similar rates. However, women reported offensive, sexist remarks and unwanted sexual advances more frequently. We found greater representation of women within a specialty is associated with a lower prevalence of harassment experienced by men and women physicians (e.g., threats of physical harm, odds ratio [OR] = 0.973 [women] and 0.984 [men], and unwanted sexual advances, OR = 0.976 [women] and 0.981 [men]). Also, as women's representation in a specialty increases, the gender gap in experiences of most types of harassment decreases.Conclusions: Greater representation of women within a medical specialty is associated with a safer environment for both men and women physicians and narrower gender gaps in harassment experience. Our findings support efforts to increase gender diversity across the specialties and illuminate the dire need for antiharassment solutions in specialties with low women's representation.

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