Operating in the margins: Women's lived experience of training and working in orthopaedic surgery in South Africa.

Mari Thiart, Megan O'Connor, Jana Müller, Nuhaa Holland, Jason Bantjes
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Medicine in South Africa (SA), as in other parts of the world, is becoming an increasingly gender diverse profession, yet orthopaedic surgery continues to be dominated by men, with women constituting approximately 5% of the profession in SA. The aim of this descriptive qualitative study was to explore women's experiences of training and working as orthopaedic surgeons in SA and identify structures, practices, attitudes, and ideologies that may promote or impede the inclusion of women. Data were collected via focus group discussions with women orthopaedic surgeons (n=16). Grounded in phenomenology, data were analysed using thematic analysis following a data-driven inductive approach to making sense of participants' experiences. Five main themes emerged: i) dynamic working environments and the work of transformation; ii) negotiating competing roles of mother and surgeon; iii) belonging, exclusion and internalised sexism; iv) gaslighting and silencing; and v) acts of resistance - agency and pushing back. The findings highlight the dynamic process in which both men and women contribute to co-creating, re-producing, and challenging practices that make medicine more inclusive.

在边缘操作:女性在南非骨科手术培训和工作的生活经验。
与世界其他地区一样,南非的医学正在成为一个性别日益多样化的职业,但骨科手术仍然由男性主导,女性约占南非该职业的5%。本描述性定性研究的目的是探讨女性在南非接受骨科医生培训和工作的经历,并确定可能促进或阻碍女性参与的结构、做法、态度和意识形态。通过与女性骨科医生(n=16)的焦点小组讨论收集数据。在现象学的基础上,数据分析使用主题分析,遵循数据驱动的归纳方法来理解参与者的经验。出现了五个主要主题:i)动态工作环境和转型工作;Ii)协商母亲和外科医生的竞争角色;Iii)归属、排斥和内化的性别歧视;煤气灯和消声;v)抵抗行为-代理和推回。这些发现突出了男性和女性共同创造、再生产和挑战实践的动态过程,这些实践使医学更具包容性。
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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