Surgery is a high‐status, distinctly embodied, profession, dominated by men and saturated with masculine ideals of individual heroism, manual skill and detachment. In this study, we focus on exploring how surgery both represses, but also requires, caring work, creating gendered contradictions for the women that enter its ranks. Based on interviews with eighteen female surgeons from Australia and New Zealand, we apply a ‘rationality of caring work’ lens to explore how they experienced these contradictions through training, socialization and in everyday interactions. Our findings show inter‐related mechanisms whereby female surgeons are required to become more independent and self‐reliant than comparable men, but also make up for the systemic...
A l’intersection d’une sociologie de la socialisation professionnelle et de la sociologie du genre, ...
Purpose: Given the high attrition rate in the field of academic surgery, we aimed to characterise t...
The purpose of this study was to describe the experiences and perceptions of two female obstetrician...
ContextThe UK set a target of 20% of the surgical consultant workforce to be represented by women by...
This study was made by a qualitative approach based on symbolic interactionism and grounded theory. ...
The UK set a target of 20% of the surgical consultant workforce to be represented by women by 2009; ...
Introduction: Diverse transitions are elemental to medical career trajectories. The effective naviga...
The purpose of this paper is to underline the remaining obstacles to the feminization of surgery. An...
ObjectiveThis study was conducted to better understand the pervasive gender barriers obstructing the...
BACKGROUND: Exploring the lived experiences of surgeons is necessary to understand the changing cult...
INTRODUCTION: Today, women make up 56% of medical students, yet just 13% of surgical consultants - a...
The purpose of this paper is to underline the remaining obstacles do the feminization of surgery. An...
The purpose of this paper is to underline the remaining obstacles do the feminization of surgery. An...
In the hospital, both male and female doctors ‘do gender’, but because men and masculinity are assoc...
Medical Sciences is the branch of science concerned with the study of the diagnosis, treatment, and ...
A l’intersection d’une sociologie de la socialisation professionnelle et de la sociologie du genre, ...
Purpose: Given the high attrition rate in the field of academic surgery, we aimed to characterise t...
The purpose of this study was to describe the experiences and perceptions of two female obstetrician...
ContextThe UK set a target of 20% of the surgical consultant workforce to be represented by women by...
This study was made by a qualitative approach based on symbolic interactionism and grounded theory. ...
The UK set a target of 20% of the surgical consultant workforce to be represented by women by 2009; ...
Introduction: Diverse transitions are elemental to medical career trajectories. The effective naviga...
The purpose of this paper is to underline the remaining obstacles to the feminization of surgery. An...
ObjectiveThis study was conducted to better understand the pervasive gender barriers obstructing the...
BACKGROUND: Exploring the lived experiences of surgeons is necessary to understand the changing cult...
INTRODUCTION: Today, women make up 56% of medical students, yet just 13% of surgical consultants - a...
The purpose of this paper is to underline the remaining obstacles do the feminization of surgery. An...
The purpose of this paper is to underline the remaining obstacles do the feminization of surgery. An...
In the hospital, both male and female doctors ‘do gender’, but because men and masculinity are assoc...
Medical Sciences is the branch of science concerned with the study of the diagnosis, treatment, and ...
A l’intersection d’une sociologie de la socialisation professionnelle et de la sociologie du genre, ...
Purpose: Given the high attrition rate in the field of academic surgery, we aimed to characterise t...
The purpose of this study was to describe the experiences and perceptions of two female obstetrician...