Affiliation:
1. Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey, USA.
2. Rothman Orthopaedic Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Abstract
Background: The most common orthopaedic fellowship is for sports medicine, but few fellowship-trained orthopaedic surgeons fill roles as team physicians. Gender disparities within the field of orthopaedics, coupled with male-dominated professional sports leagues in the United States, may lead to lower representation of women as professional team physicians. Purpose: To (1) determine the career path trajectories of current head team physicians in professional sports, (2) quantify gender disparities across team physician representation, and (3) further characterize professional profiles of team physicians appointed to women’s and men’s professional sports leagues in the United States. Study Design: Cross-sectional study. Methods: This is a cross-sectional study of professional sports head team physicians in 8 major American sports leagues: American football (National Football League), baseball (Major League Baseball), basketball (National Basketball Association and Women’s National Basketball Association), hockey (National Hockey League and National Women’s Hockey League), and soccer (Major League Soccer and National Women’s Soccer League). Online searches were used to compile information on gender, specialty, medical school, residency, fellowship, years in practice, clinical practice type, practice setting, and research productivity. Differences according to league type (men’s vs women’s leagues) were analyzed with the chi-square test for categorical variables, t test for continuous variables, and Mann-Whitney U test for nonparametric means. Bonferroni correction was applied for multiple comparisons. Results: Within the 172 professional sports teams, 183 head team physicians were identified, including 170 men (92.9%) and 13 women (7.1%). Team physicians in both men’s and women’s sports leagues were predominantly men. Overall, 96.7% of team physicians in men’s leagues were men, and 73.3% of team physicians in women’s leagues were men ( P < .001). The most common physician specialties were orthopaedic surgery (70.0%) and family medicine (19.1%). Compared with team physicians in women’s leagues, those in men’s leagues were more likely to be orthopaedic surgeons (40.0% vs 71.9%, respectively; P = .001) and to have more experience (15.9 vs 22.4 years, respectively; P < .001). Conclusion: Study findings indicated disparities in gender, practice experience, and physician specialty representation among team physicians in men’s versus women’s professional sports leagues.
Subject
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Reference19 articles.
1. AAOS Department of Clinical Quality and Value. Orthopaedic practice in the U.S. 2018. Published January 2019. Accessed October 28, 2020. https://www.aaos.org/globalassets/quality-and-practice-resources/census/2018-census.pdf
2. Association of American Medical Colleges. Applicants, first time applicants, acceptees, and matriculants to U.S. medical schools by sex, 2011-2012 through 2020-2021. Published 2022. Accessed February 2022. https://www.aamc.org/data-reports/students-residents/data/2022-facts-applicants-and-matriculants-data
3. Male Practice: Gender Inequality in Orthopaedic Surgery
4. Understanding the Politics of Being a Team Physician
5. Despite Growing Number of Women Surgeons, Authorship Gender Disparity in Orthopaedic Literature Persists Over 30 Years