Background: The aim of this study is to highlight career paths of senior women leaders in academic emergency medicine (EM) to encourage younger women to pursue leadership. Methods: This was a qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with female EM leaders. We interviewed 22 recognized female leaders selected using criterion-based sampling and a standardized script of open-ended questions derived from the Intelligent Career Model. Questions were related to job purpose, skills, and networking. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and three trained reviewers analyzed transcripts following grounded theory principles and using Dedoose®. Researchers used an iterative process over several meetings to produce the final set of codes and th...
In the last twenty years, researchers could not fully reach an agreement of whether female and male ...
Women earn degrees at a higher rate than men, yet they are underrepresented in leadership positions ...
Women earn degrees at a higher rate than men, yet they are underrepresented in leadership positions ...
Abstract Background The aim of this study is to highlight career paths of senior women leaders in ac...
Learning Objectives: To determine if women in Emergency Medicine academic leadership roles received ...
Despite progress made over the past decade, women in medicine are underrepresented in advanced acade...
Learning Objectives: To determine if women in Emergency Medicine academic leadership roles received ...
Women now make up half of all medical school matriculates; yet few women hold leadership positions i...
Introduction: Leadership positions occupied by women within academic emergency medicine have remaine...
Introduction: Leadership positions occupied by women within academic emergency medicine have remaine...
Introduction: Leadership positions occupied by women within academic emergency medicine have remaine...
Despite progress made over the past decade, women in medicine are underrepresented in advanced acade...
© 2019 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Objectives: Organizations to promote career ne...
OBJECTIVE: To elicit medical leaders' views on reasons and remedies for the under-representation of ...
In the last twenty years, researchers could not fully reach an agreement of whether female and male ...
In the last twenty years, researchers could not fully reach an agreement of whether female and male ...
Women earn degrees at a higher rate than men, yet they are underrepresented in leadership positions ...
Women earn degrees at a higher rate than men, yet they are underrepresented in leadership positions ...
Abstract Background The aim of this study is to highlight career paths of senior women leaders in ac...
Learning Objectives: To determine if women in Emergency Medicine academic leadership roles received ...
Despite progress made over the past decade, women in medicine are underrepresented in advanced acade...
Learning Objectives: To determine if women in Emergency Medicine academic leadership roles received ...
Women now make up half of all medical school matriculates; yet few women hold leadership positions i...
Introduction: Leadership positions occupied by women within academic emergency medicine have remaine...
Introduction: Leadership positions occupied by women within academic emergency medicine have remaine...
Introduction: Leadership positions occupied by women within academic emergency medicine have remaine...
Despite progress made over the past decade, women in medicine are underrepresented in advanced acade...
© 2019 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Objectives: Organizations to promote career ne...
OBJECTIVE: To elicit medical leaders' views on reasons and remedies for the under-representation of ...
In the last twenty years, researchers could not fully reach an agreement of whether female and male ...
In the last twenty years, researchers could not fully reach an agreement of whether female and male ...
Women earn degrees at a higher rate than men, yet they are underrepresented in leadership positions ...
Women earn degrees at a higher rate than men, yet they are underrepresented in leadership positions ...