What's in a Word? Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis of Leadership Language in Anesthesiology Resident Feedback

Author:

Arkin Nicole1,Lai Cara1,Kiwakyou Larissa Miyachi1,Lochbaum Gregory Milo1,Shafer Audrey1,Howard Steven K.1,Mariano Edward R.1,Fassiotto Magali1

Affiliation:

1. All authors are with Stanford University School of Medicine. Nicole Arkin, MD, is a Resident Physician (PGY-4), Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative, and Pain Medicine; Cara Lai, BS, is a Medical Student (MS-3); Larissa Miyachi Kiwakyou, MD, is a Resident Physician (PGY-1), Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative, and Pain Medicine; Gregory Milo Lochbaum, MD, is Clinical Assistant Prof

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background  Individuals who have agentic traits (eg, assertive, confident, competent) that are more commonly associated with men are often selected for leadership roles. For women, this poses a potential barrier to entry into the higher ranks of academic medicine. Objective  We analyzed anesthesiology resident feedback for differences in the use of agentic descriptors using qualitative and quantitative methods based on resident gender and year of training. Methods  This study uses textual analysis of 435 assessments of residents over a 1-year period within a single residency program. We performed a qualitative content analysis on the words used in resident feedback and performed negative binomial regression analyses to determine significant differences in the way residents were described based on gender and year of training. Results  Female residents were less likely than male residents to be described as agentic after controlling for excerpt length, year of training, and evaluator variability (β = –0.347; 95% confidence interval [CI] –0.666, –0.028; P = .033). Senior residents were more likely to be described as agentic (β = 0.702; 95% CI 0.402–1.002; P < .001) compared to junior residents. The increased number of agentic codes among senior residents was driven by increased agentic description of female residents' ratings in the senior cohort (β = 0.704; 95% CI 0.084–1.324; P = .026). Conclusions  Female residents were described as agentic less often than male residents in early years of training, but the gap was not present among senior residents.

Publisher

Journal of Graduate Medical Education

Subject

General Medicine

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