Literature DB >> 11154189

Ensuring the success of women faculty at AMCs: lessons learned from the National Centers of Excellence in Women's Health.

P S Morahan1, M L Voytko, S Abbuhl, L J Means, D W Wara, J Thorson, C E Cotsonas.   

Abstract

Since the early 1970s, the numbers of women entering medical school and, subsequently, academic medicine have increased substantially. However, women faculty have not advanced at the expected rate to senior academic ranks or positions of leadership. In 1996, to counter this trend, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) Office on Women's Health included women's leadership as a required component of the nationally funded Centers of Excellence in Women's Health to identify effective strategies and initiate model programs to advance women faculty in academic medicine. The authors describe the experience of Centers at seven U.S. medical schools in initiating and sustaining leadership programs for women. The processes used for program formation, the current programmatic content, and program evaluation approaches are explained. Areas of success (e.g., obtaining support from the institution's leaders) and difficulties faced in maintaining an established program (such as institutional fiscal constraints and the diminishing time available to women to participate in mentoring and leadership activities) are reviewed. Strategies to overcome these and other difficulties (e.g., prioritize and tightly focus the program with the help of an advisory group) are proposed. The authors conclude by reviewing issues that programs for women in academic medicine will increasingly need to focus on (e.g., development of new kinds of skills; issues of recruitment and retention of faculty; and increasing faculty diversity).

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11154189     DOI: 10.1097/00001888-200101000-00008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  6 in total

1.  Medical women in academia: the silences we keep.

Authors:  Anita Palepu; Carol P Herbert
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2002-10-15       Impact factor: 8.262

2.  Narratives of Participants in National Career Development Programs for Women in Academic Medicine: Identifying the Opportunities for Strategic Investment.

Authors:  Deborah L Helitzer; Sharon L Newbill; Gina Cardinali; Page S Morahan; Shine Chang; Diane Magrane
Journal:  J Womens Health (Larchmt)       Date:  2016-03-16       Impact factor: 2.681

3.  Gender and the professional career of primary care physicians in Andalusia (Spain).

Authors:  Ana Delgado; Lorena Saletti-Cuesta; Luis Andrés López-Fernández; Juan de Dios de Dios Luna; Inmaculada Mateo-Rodriguez
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2011-02-28       Impact factor: 2.655

4.  A Randomized Controlled Trial to Improve the Success of Women Assistant Professors.

Authors:  Jeane Ann Grisso; Mary Dupuis Sammel; Arthur H Rubenstein; Rebecca M Speck; Emily F Conant; Patricia Scott; Lucy Wolf Tuton; Alyssa Friede Westring; Stewart Friedman; Stephanie B Abbuhl
Journal:  J Womens Health (Larchmt)       Date:  2017-02-28       Impact factor: 2.681

5.  Advancing women in healthcare leadership: A systematic review and meta-synthesis of multi-sector evidence on organisational interventions.

Authors:  Mariam Mousa; Jacqueline Boyle; Helen Skouteris; Alexandra K Mullins; Graeme Currie; Kathleen Riach; Helena J Teede
Journal:  EClinicalMedicine       Date:  2021-08-12

6.  Career support in medicine - experiences with a mentoring program for junior physicians at a university hospital.

Authors:  Barbara Buddeberg-Fischer; Esther Vetsch; Guido Mattanza
Journal:  Psychosoc Med       Date:  2004-07-01
  6 in total

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