Gender bias in medical education: A scoping review

Author:

Yaman Reena1ORCID,Hagen Kate M.2,Ghaith Summer3ORCID,Luong Hanna3,Almader‐Douglas Diana4ORCID,Langley Natalie R.5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine Mayo Clinic Arizona Scottsdale Arizona USA

2. Department of Psychiatry Mayo Clinic Minnesota Rochester Minnesota USA

3. Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine Mayo Clinic Phoenix Arizona USA

4. Department of Library Services Mayo Clinic Arizona Phoenix Arizona USA

5. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology Mayo Clinic Arizona Phoenix Arizona USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeThis scoping review summarises five decades of research on gender bias in subjective performance evaluations of medical trainees.MethodA medical librarian searched PubMed, Ovid Embase, Scopus, Web of Science and Cochrane DBSR in June 2020. Two researchers independently reviewed each abstract to determine if it met inclusion criteria (original research article investigating gender bias in subjective medical trainee evaluations by staff). References from selected articles were also reviewed for inclusion. Data were extracted from the articles, and summary statistics were performed.ResultsA total of 212 abstracts were reviewed, and 32 met criteria. Twenty (62.5%) evaluated residents, and 12 (37.5%) studied medical students. The majority of studies on residents were Internal Medicine (n = 8, 40.0%) and Surgery (n = 7, 35.0%). All studies were performed in North America and were either retrospective or observational. Nine (28.0%) were qualitative, and 24 (75.0%) were quantitative. The majority of studies were published in the last decade (n = 21, 65.6%). Twenty (62.5%) studies documented gender bias, of which 11 (55%) found that males received higher quantitative performance evaluations and 5 (25%) found that females received higher evaluation scores. The remaining 4 (20%) reported gender differences in qualitative evaluations.ConclusionsMost studies detected gender bias in subjective performance evaluations of medical trainees, with a majority favouring males. There is a paucity of studies on bias in medical education with a lack of standardised approach to investigating bias.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Review and Exam Preparation,General Medicine

Reference58 articles.

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2. Association of American Medical Colleges.Table 13: U.S. medical school faculty by gender rank and department 2021 [Internet].2021[cited 2022 Aug 23]. Available from:https://www.aamc.org/data-reports/faculty-institutions/interactive-data/data-reports/faculty-institutions/interactive-data/2021-us-medical-school-faculty

3. Association of American Medical Colleges.Table 1.3 number and percentage of active physicians by sex and specialty 2019 [Internet].2019[cited 2022 Aug 23]. Available from:https://www.aamc.org/data-reports/workforce/interactive-data/active-physicians-sex-and-specialty-2019

4. Association of American Medical Colleges.U.S. medical school department chairs by chair type and sex [Internet].2021[cited 2022 Aug 23]. Available from:https://www.aamc.org/data-reports/faculty-institutions/interactive-data/https/wwwaamcorg/data-reports/faculty-institutions/interactive-data/us-medical-school-chairs-trends

5. Gender Disparity Among American Medicine and Surgery Physicians: A Systematic Review

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