学术医疗中心女教员的经验。

IF 1.8 Q3 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Women's health reports (New Rochelle, N.Y.) Pub Date : 2025-03-13 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1089/whr.2024.0138
Charlotte R Esplin, Lisa Calderwood, Chantel M Weisenmuller, Jessica L Luzier
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:女教员在医学学术生涯中面临的障碍与男教员不同。女教员报告说,她们感觉自己是“局外人”,与男性相比,她们在职业发展方面遇到了多重障碍,尤其是如果她们拥有非医学学位(例如博士学位)。本研究考察了美国阿巴拉契亚地区一个大型区域性学术医疗中心(AMC)的工作场所文化对女性的不同影响,这一地理区域在本文献中尚未得到充分研究。材料和方法:47名女性完成了一项调查,包括有利于女性学业成功的文化工具、职业成就感指数、工作和家庭冲突量表,以及测量倦怠、儿童保育可用性和人口因素的项目。结果:我们的研究结果显示,许多女教师认为她们受到了与男教师不同的待遇,工作侵犯了她们的家庭和家庭生活,尽管她们在工作中获得了职业成就感,但育儿问题加剧了她们想要离开这份工作的想法。我们的样本中约有60%的人表现出某种程度的倦怠。结论:这些发现与之前的研究结果一致,即女性同时扮演着男性通常不会扮演的多种角色,而这种同时扮演的角色可能是女性没有像男性那样留在学术医学领域或获得同等晋升的原因之一。我们为所使用的措施提供了增量有效性,并描述了改进的具体想法,例如现场儿童保育,标准化的休假政策,以及正式的指导和课程计划。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Experiences of Women Faculty in an Academic Medical Center.

Background: Women faculty face different obstacles in academic medical careers than their men counterparts. Women faculty report feeling like "outsiders" and experiencing multiple barriers to career advancement compared with men, especially if they hold a nonmedical degree (e.g., PhD). This study examined aspects of workplace culture that differentially impact women at a large regional academic medical center (AMC) in the Appalachian region of the United States-a geographic area that is largely understudied in this body of literature.

Materials and methods: Forty-seven women completed a survey that included the Culture Conducive to Women's Academic Success instrument, the Professional Fulfillment Index, the Work and Family Conflict scale, and items measuring burnout, childcare availability, and demographic factors.

Results: Our findings revealed that many women faculty felt that they were being treated differently than men faculty, that work infringed on their home and family life, and that while they were professionally fulfilled at work, childcare problems exacerbated feelings of wanting to leave that AMC. About 60% of our sample indicated some level of burnout.

Conclusions: These findings align with previous findings that women juggle multiple roles that are typically not expected of men, and this juggling may be one reason why women are not staying in academic medicine or being promoted at the same rate as men. We provide incremental validity for the measures used and delineate specific ideas for improvement, such as on-site childcare, standardized leave policies, and formal mentorship and curriculum programs.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
18 weeks
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