Is Program Director Gender Associated With Gender Diversity Among Orthopaedic Surgery Residency Programs?

Rosamaria Dias, Isabel Herzog, Simona Alomary, Kathleen S Beebe
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(2) Do women and men differ in the time to appointment of program director?\n \n \n \n A list of 207 orthopaedic surgery residencies was obtained from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) website for the academic year 2021 to 2022. The study excluded 6% (13) of programs; 4% (8) were those without ACGME accreditation and those with initial accreditation, and 2% (5) did not have updated 2021 to 2022 resident lists. Descriptive information on 194 programs was obtained from publicly accessible resources from July 2021 through July 2022. The institution’s website and the American Medical Association’s (AMA) Fellowship and Residency Electronic Interactive Database (FREIDA) was used to collect residency program characteristics and resident demographics [2]. Doximity, Healthgrades, and LinkedIn were used to further collect current orthopaedic surgery residency program director demographics, including gender, age, and education/training history. To determine gender, photographs and pronouns (she/her/hers or he/him/hers) used in their biographies were used first. To confirm this, secondary sources were used including their NPI profile, which lists gender; Doximity; and their LinkedIn profile. Scopus was used to analyze research output by the program directors—using the Hirsch index (h-index) as the primary bibliometric metric. A total of 194 program directors were identified, of whom of 12% (23) were women and 88% (171) were men. Of the 4421 total residents among these programs, 20% (887) were women and 80% (3534) were men. A univariate analysis comparing program directors was conducted, with continuous variables analyzed using an independent-sample t-test and categorical variables analyzed using a Pearson chi-square test. With the numbers available, a post hoc statistical power calculation indicated that we could detect an 32% difference in the percentage of women in a program as significant with 80% power at the p < 0.05 level, whereas we might have been underpowered to discern smaller differences than that.\n \n \n \n With the numbers available, we found no difference in the percentage of women in residency programs run by women program directors than in programs in which the program director was a man (22% [125 of 558] versus 20% [762 of 3863], mean difference 2% [95% CI -1.24% to 7.58%]; p = 0.08). Comparing women to men program directors, women had fewer years between residency completion and appointment to the position of program director (8 ± 2 years versus 12 ± 7 years, mean difference 4 years [95% CI 2.01 to 7.93 years]; p = 0.02) and had a lower mean h-index (7 ± 4 versus 11 ± 11, mean difference 4 [95% CI 1.70 to 6.56]; p = 0.03) and number of publications (24 ± 23 versus 41 ± 62, mean difference 17 [95% CI 3.98 to 31.05]; p = 0.01), although they did not differ in terms of their advanced degrees, duration of training, or likelihood of having taken a fellowship.\n \n \n \n Orthopaedic residency programs that were run by women did not contain a higher percentage of women residents, suggesting that the gender of the individual in that role may not be as important as has been speculated by others. Future studies should investigate the intersectionality of gender, race, and ethnicity of residents, program directors, and current faculty.\n \n \n \n The fact that women were placed in program director roles earlier in career may also carry special jeopardy for them. Those roles are difficult and can impair a faculty member’s ability to conduct individual research, which often is key to further academic promotions. Given that and the fact that the gender of the program director was not associated with differences in gender composition of residency programs, we believe that increasing mentorship and access to pipeline programs will help promote diversity in residency programs.\n","PeriodicalId":115399,"journal":{"name":"Clinical Orthopaedics &amp; Related Research","volume":"50 s249","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Clinical Orthopaedics &amp; Related Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1097/corr.0000000000003070","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Women remain underrepresented in leadership roles, faculty roles, and among residents in orthopaedic surgery. It has been suggested that having women in leadership positions in orthopaedic surgery may help to increase the gender diversity of residency programs. However, to our knowledge, no study has explored the relationship, if any, between the gender of the residency program director and the percentage of women in the residency program. (1) Is the program director’s gender associated with differences in the percentage of women orthopaedic surgery residents? (2) Do women and men differ in the time to appointment of program director? A list of 207 orthopaedic surgery residencies was obtained from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) website for the academic year 2021 to 2022. The study excluded 6% (13) of programs; 4% (8) were those without ACGME accreditation and those with initial accreditation, and 2% (5) did not have updated 2021 to 2022 resident lists. Descriptive information on 194 programs was obtained from publicly accessible resources from July 2021 through July 2022. The institution’s website and the American Medical Association’s (AMA) Fellowship and Residency Electronic Interactive Database (FREIDA) was used to collect residency program characteristics and resident demographics [2]. Doximity, Healthgrades, and LinkedIn were used to further collect current orthopaedic surgery residency program director demographics, including gender, age, and education/training history. To determine gender, photographs and pronouns (she/her/hers or he/him/hers) used in their biographies were used first. To confirm this, secondary sources were used including their NPI profile, which lists gender; Doximity; and their LinkedIn profile. Scopus was used to analyze research output by the program directors—using the Hirsch index (h-index) as the primary bibliometric metric. A total of 194 program directors were identified, of whom of 12% (23) were women and 88% (171) were men. Of the 4421 total residents among these programs, 20% (887) were women and 80% (3534) were men. A univariate analysis comparing program directors was conducted, with continuous variables analyzed using an independent-sample t-test and categorical variables analyzed using a Pearson chi-square test. With the numbers available, a post hoc statistical power calculation indicated that we could detect an 32% difference in the percentage of women in a program as significant with 80% power at the p < 0.05 level, whereas we might have been underpowered to discern smaller differences than that. With the numbers available, we found no difference in the percentage of women in residency programs run by women program directors than in programs in which the program director was a man (22% [125 of 558] versus 20% [762 of 3863], mean difference 2% [95% CI -1.24% to 7.58%]; p = 0.08). Comparing women to men program directors, women had fewer years between residency completion and appointment to the position of program director (8 ± 2 years versus 12 ± 7 years, mean difference 4 years [95% CI 2.01 to 7.93 years]; p = 0.02) and had a lower mean h-index (7 ± 4 versus 11 ± 11, mean difference 4 [95% CI 1.70 to 6.56]; p = 0.03) and number of publications (24 ± 23 versus 41 ± 62, mean difference 17 [95% CI 3.98 to 31.05]; p = 0.01), although they did not differ in terms of their advanced degrees, duration of training, or likelihood of having taken a fellowship. Orthopaedic residency programs that were run by women did not contain a higher percentage of women residents, suggesting that the gender of the individual in that role may not be as important as has been speculated by others. Future studies should investigate the intersectionality of gender, race, and ethnicity of residents, program directors, and current faculty. The fact that women were placed in program director roles earlier in career may also carry special jeopardy for them. Those roles are difficult and can impair a faculty member’s ability to conduct individual research, which often is key to further academic promotions. Given that and the fact that the gender of the program director was not associated with differences in gender composition of residency programs, we believe that increasing mentorship and access to pipeline programs will help promote diversity in residency programs.
矫形外科住院医师项目的性别多样性与项目主任的性别有关吗?
在骨科外科的领导岗位、教师岗位和住院医生中,女性的比例仍然偏低。有人认为,让女性担任骨科外科的领导职务可能有助于增加住院医师培训项目的性别多样性。然而,据我们所知,还没有研究探讨过住院医师培训项目主任的性别与住院医师培训项目中女性比例之间的关系(如果有的话)。 (1)项目主任的性别是否与骨科外科女住院医师比例的差异有关?(2) 女性和男性担任项目主任的时间是否有差异? 研究人员从美国毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)网站上获得了 207 家骨科外科住院医师培训机构的名单,这些机构的学年为 2021 至 2022 学年。该研究排除了6%(13个)的项目;4%(8个)的项目没有通过ACGME认证,还有一些项目通过了初步认证,2%(5个)的项目没有更新2021至2022学年的住院医师名单。194个项目的描述性信息来自2021年7月至2022年7月期间的公开资源。机构网站和美国医学会(AMA)的研究员和住院医师电子互动数据库(FREIDA)被用来收集住院医师项目的特征和住院医师的人口统计数据[2]。Doximity、Healthgrades和LinkedIn被用来进一步收集当前骨科外科住院医师项目主任的人口统计数据,包括性别、年龄和教育/培训历史。为了确定性别,首先使用了照片和传记中使用的代词(她/她/她或他/他/她)。为了确认这一点,还使用了二手资料,包括列出性别的 NPI 个人资料、Doximity 和 LinkedIn 个人资料。Scopus 被用来分析项目主任的研究成果--使用赫希指数(h-index)作为主要的文献计量指标。共发现了 194 名项目主任,其中女性占 12%(23 人),男性占 88%(171 人)。在这些项目的 4421 名住院医师中,20%(887 人)为女性,80%(3534 人)为男性。我们对项目主任进行了单变量分析比较,连续变量采用独立样本 t 检验,分类变量采用皮尔逊卡方检验。根据现有数据,事后统计功率计算表明,在 p < 0.05 的水平上,我们可以通过 80% 的功率检测出女性在项目中所占比例的 32% 差异具有显著性,而对于比这更小的差异,我们的功率可能不足。 根据现有数据,我们发现在由女性项目主任管理的住院医师培训项目中,女性比例与项目主任为男性的培训项目中的女性比例没有差异(22% [558人中的125人] 对 20% [3863人中的762人],平均差异为2% [95% CI -1.24% to 7.58%];P = 0.08)。比较女性和男性项目主任,女性从完成住院医师培训到被任命为项目主任的时间较短(8 ± 2 年对 12 ± 7 年,平均相差 4 年 [95% CI 2.01 到 7.93 年];p = 0.02),平均 h 指数较低(7 ± 4 对 11 ± 11,平均相差 4 [95% CI 1.70 to 6.56];p = 0.03)和发表论文的数量(24 ± 23 对 41 ± 62,平均差异为 17 [95% CI 3.98 to 31.05];p = 0.01),尽管他们在高学历、培训时间或获得研究金的可能性方面没有差异。 由女性管理的骨科住院医师项目中女性住院医师的比例并不高,这表明担任该职位的个人性别可能并不像其他人推测的那样重要。未来的研究应该调查住院医师、项目主任和现任教师的性别、种族和民族的交叉性。 事实上,女性在职业生涯的早期就被安排担任项目主任一职,这也可能会给她们带来特殊的危险。这些职位很难胜任,会影响教员开展个人研究的能力,而个人研究往往是进一步学术晋升的关键。鉴于这一点,以及项目主任的性别与住院医师培训项目的性别组成差异无关这一事实,我们认为,增加导师指导和进入管道项目的机会将有助于促进住院医师培训项目的多样性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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