Resident perspectives on the role of gender in operative experience during general surgery residency training: A mixed-methods study
It remains unclear why female general surgery residents perform fewer cases than male peers. This exploratory study investigated possible contributors to gender-based disparities and solutions for improving equity in operative experience. Surveys, including Likert scale and free-text questions, were...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of surgery 2024-11, Vol.237, p.115755, Article 115755 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | It remains unclear why female general surgery residents perform fewer cases than male peers. This exploratory study investigated possible contributors to gender-based disparities and solutions for improving equity in operative experience.
Surveys, including Likert scale and free-text questions, were distributed to 21 accredited general surgery residency programs.
There were 96 respondents, of whom 69% were female. 22% of females personally experienced barriers to operative experience versus 13% of males (p = 0.41), while 52% of female residents believed operative training was affected by gender (p = 0.004). Inductive analysis revealed the most common barrier to operating room participation was floor work/clinical tasks. The most common barrier for female residents was perceived sexism/gender bias, with subthemes of “misidentification,” “feeling unwelcome,” and “poor trust/autonomy.” To improve parity, residents proposed structured program-level review, feedback, and transparent expectations about case assignments.
Female general surgery residents believe gender bias impacts training. Further mixed-methods research is crucial to determine the cause of gender-based disparities in operative experience.
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•Prior studies reveal gender and sex-based differences in general surgery case logs and operative experience.•In this multicenter study, 53% of female general surgery residents felt that gender influences training quality.•Sexism and gender bias were the predominant perceived barriers to operating room participation for female residents. |
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ISSN: | 0002-9610 1879-1883 1879-1883 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2024.04.026 |