Sexism has been perceived at all levels of medical education. Although specialty training has been scrutinized from various perspectives, there have been few objective assessments of sexual discrimination in the selection of candidates. This study evaluates the responses of board-certified physicians to fictional residency applicants’ personal statements, which were identical except for gender. Male and female physicians from six specialties in which women were overrepresented and six specialties in which women were underrepresented all favored female candidates. Female physicians in both groups rated male candidates as less hardworking than did male physicians. Implications of these and other findings are discussed
BackgroundCompetency-based medical education relies on meaningful resident assessment. Implicit gend...
During the last 15 years, women have substantially increased their share of traditionally male pr...
Three hypotheses have been offered to explain the historical specialty selection by women physicians...
Sexism has been perceived at all levels of medical education. Although specialty training has been s...
Sexism has been documented at every level of medical training as well as in the community of practic...
BackgroundFemales make up more than half of medical school matriculants but only one-third of emerge...
Objectives To examine sex differences in the specialty training recruitment outcomes of UK medical g...
Background: Women represent 15 % of practicing general surgeons. Gender-based discrimination has bee...
Background: The literature investigating female and male medical students' differing career intentio...
Background: The literature investigating female and male medical students' differing career intentio...
Background More and more female residents enter postgraduate medical training (PGMT). Meanwhile, wom...
In the United States, women physicians remain concentrated in a few specialties despite their increa...
Sexual and gender minorities (SGM) in medicine experience unique stressors in training. However, lit...
Objective Medical schools now average approximately 50% female students, yet a disproportionate numb...
Background: Women represent 15% of practicing general surgeons. Gender-based discrimination has been...
BackgroundCompetency-based medical education relies on meaningful resident assessment. Implicit gend...
During the last 15 years, women have substantially increased their share of traditionally male pr...
Three hypotheses have been offered to explain the historical specialty selection by women physicians...
Sexism has been perceived at all levels of medical education. Although specialty training has been s...
Sexism has been documented at every level of medical training as well as in the community of practic...
BackgroundFemales make up more than half of medical school matriculants but only one-third of emerge...
Objectives To examine sex differences in the specialty training recruitment outcomes of UK medical g...
Background: Women represent 15 % of practicing general surgeons. Gender-based discrimination has bee...
Background: The literature investigating female and male medical students' differing career intentio...
Background: The literature investigating female and male medical students' differing career intentio...
Background More and more female residents enter postgraduate medical training (PGMT). Meanwhile, wom...
In the United States, women physicians remain concentrated in a few specialties despite their increa...
Sexual and gender minorities (SGM) in medicine experience unique stressors in training. However, lit...
Objective Medical schools now average approximately 50% female students, yet a disproportionate numb...
Background: Women represent 15% of practicing general surgeons. Gender-based discrimination has been...
BackgroundCompetency-based medical education relies on meaningful resident assessment. Implicit gend...
During the last 15 years, women have substantially increased their share of traditionally male pr...
Three hypotheses have been offered to explain the historical specialty selection by women physicians...