The academic progress of female general surgery and orthopaedic surgery trainees in South Africa.

IF 0.4 4区 医学 Q4 SURGERY
South African Journal of Surgery Pub Date : 2024-03-01
S Govender, R Naidoo, S Ebrahim, B Singh
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Globally, medical institutes have seen an increase in female graduates, however surgical disciplines remain male-dominated. An epidemiological shift towards non-communicable diseases and trauma may result in a shortage of surgical specialists. One strategy to improve the surgical workforce is the recruitment of female graduates.

Methods: A non-validated questionnaire was administered to females registered for the Master of Medicine (MMED) degree in General and Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) between 2000 and 2015. The study evaluated reasons for choice of surgery as a career, challenges faced on the domestic and work front, as well as factors that assisted with successful completion of training.

Results: Seventy-two female trainees in General Surgery and Orthopaedics were identified from the UKZN databases. The contact details for 62 of these trainees were available. The overall response rate was 71.0% (44/62). A total of 95.5% (42/44) of participants selected surgery due to a passion for the field. Major challenges identified were a poor home and work-life balance (72.1%, 31/43) and poor working conditions (62.8%, 27/43). Female trainees perceived that they were viewed as inferior by patients (65.9%, 29/44). Successful trainees had a good home support system (89.3%, 25/28) and mentorship during training (60.7%, 17/28), and 85.7% (24/28) did not regret their career choice.

Conclusion: The recruitment and retention of females in surgery will contribute to maintaining an adequate surgical workforce. Training programmes need to improve work-life balance without compromising on producing competent surgeons. Improved visibility of female surgeons in leadership roles should be encouraged to promote mentorship and recruitment of trainees.

南非普外科和矫形外科女学员的学术进步。
背景:在全球范围内,医学院的女性毕业生人数有所增加,但外科学科仍以男性为主。流行病学向非传染性疾病和创伤的转变可能导致外科专家短缺。改善外科人才队伍的策略之一就是招聘女性毕业生:在2000年至2015年期间,对夸祖鲁-纳塔尔大学(UKZN)注册攻读普通外科和矫形外科医学硕士(MMED)学位的女性进行了未经验证的问卷调查。研究评估了选择外科作为职业的原因、在家庭和工作方面面临的挑战以及有助于成功完成培训的因素:从 UKZN 数据库中确定了 72 名普通外科和矫形外科的女学员。其中 62 名受训人员的详细联系方式可用。总回复率为 71.0%(44/62)。共有 95.5%(42/44)的参与者因热爱外科而选择了外科。所面临的主要挑战是家庭与工作生活的不平衡(72.1%,31/43)和恶劣的工作条件(62.8%,27/43)。女性受训人员认为她们被病人视为低人一等(65.9%,29/44)。成功的受训者拥有良好的家庭支持系统(89.3%,25/28)和培训期间的导师(60.7%,17/28),85.7%(24/28)的受训者不后悔自己的职业选择:结论:招聘和留住外科女性将有助于维持充足的外科人才队伍。培训计划需要在不影响培养合格外科医生的前提下改善工作与生活的平衡。应鼓励提高女外科医生担任领导职务的能见度,以促进指导和招聘学员。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
20.00%
发文量
43
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The South African Journal of Surgery (SAJS) is a quarterly, general surgical journal. It carries research articles and letters, editorials, clinical practice and other surgical articles and personal opinion, South African health-related news, obituaries and general correspondence.
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