| Literature DB >> 22239742 |
Jenny Andersson1, Petra Verdonk, Eva E Johansson, Toine Lagro-Janssen, Katarina Hamberg.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To ascertain good and appropriate healthcare for both women and men implementation of gender perspectives in medical education is needed. For a successful implementation, knowledge about students' attitudes and beliefs about men, women, and gender is crucial. The aim of this study was to compare attitudes to gender and gender stereotyping among Dutch and Swedish male and female medical students.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22239742 PMCID: PMC3277467 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6920-12-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
The N-GAMS scale, also showing items excluded*, scored in reverse_R and added to original scale_A
| GS, Gender sensitivity (excluded items*, items scored in reverse_R) | |
|---|---|
| GS1_R | addressing differences between men and women creates inequity in health care* |
| GS2 | physicians' knowledge of gender differences in illness and health increases quality of care* |
| GS3_R | physicians should only address biological differences between men and women |
| GS4_R | in non-sex-specific health disorders the sex/gender of the patient is irrelevant |
| GS5_R | a physician should confine as much as possible to biomedical aspects of health complaints of men and women |
| GS6_R | physicians do not need to know what happens in the lives of men and women to be able to deliver medical care* |
| GS7_R | differences between male and female physicians are too small to be relevant |
| GS8_R | especially because men and women are different, physicians should treat everybody the same |
| GS9_R | physicians who address gender differences are not dealing with the important issues |
| GS10_R | in communicating with patients it does not matter to a physician whether the patients are men or women |
| GS11_R | in communicating with patients it does not matter whether the physician is a man or a woman |
| GS12_R | differences between male and female patients are so small that physicians can hardly take them into account |
| GS13 | for effective treatment, physicians should address gender differences in etiology and consequences of disease* |
| GS14_R | it is not necessary to consider gender differences in presentation of complaints* |
| GRIP1 | male patients better understand physicians' measures than female patients |
| GRIP2 | female patients compared to male patients have unreasonable expectations of physicians |
| GRIP3 | women more frequently than men want to discuss problems with physicians that do not belong in the consultation room |
| GRIP4 | women expect too much emotional support from physicians |
| GRIP5 | male patients are less demanding than female patients |
| GRIP6 | women are larger consumers of health care than is actually needed |
| GRIP7 | men do not go to a physician for harmless health problems |
| GRIP8 | medically unexplained symptoms develop in women because they lament too much about their health |
| GRIP9 | female patients complain about their health because they need more attention than male patients |
| GRIP10 | it is easier to find causes of health complaints in men because men communicate in a direct way |
| GRIP11 | men appeal to health care more often with problems they should have prevented* |
| GRID1 | male physicians put too much emphasis on technical aspects of medicine compared to female physicians |
| GRID2 | female physicians extend their consultations too much compared to male physicians |
| GRID3 | male physicians are more efficient than female physicians |
| GRID4 | female physicians are more empathic than male physicians |
| GRID5 | female physicians needlessly take into account how a patient experiences disease |
| GRID6 | male physicians are better able to deal with the work than female physicians* |
| GRID7 | female physicians are too emotionally involved with their patients |
| GRID8_A | compared to female physicians, male physicians are too hurried in their consultations |
*items removed during factor analysis due to low factor loading.
_R items scored in reverse, i.e. the more you agree, the lower your gender sensitivity score.
_A item added to the original N-GAMS scale to achieve an equal number of statements about male and female doctors.
Dutch and Swedish medical students' characteristics
| Variable | Categories | P | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD) | 18.8 (1.70) | 22.7 (3.70) | < 0.001† | |
| Sex, % (n) | Male | 30.5 (188) | 46.0 (221) | < 0.001Ω |
| Female | 69.5 (428) | 54.0 (259) | ||
| Sexual orientation | Heterosexual | 98.2 (605) | 94.6 (452) | 0.001 Ω |
| Other | 1.8 (11) | 5.4 (26) | ||
| Civil status | Single | 97.1 (598) | 78.3 (376) | < 0.001 Ω |
| Cohabiting/married | 2.9 (18) | 21.7 (104) | ||
| Children | Yes | 0 (0) | 4.2 (20) | < 0.001 Ω |
| No | 100 (612) | 95.8 (457) | ||
| Birth country student | Country of study | 94.6 (575) | 95.8 (459) | 0.341 Ω |
| Other | 5.4 (33) | 4.2 (20) | ||
| Birth country mother | Country of study | 90.3 (543) | 91.9 (440) | 0.389 Ω |
| Other | 9.7 (58) | 8.1 (39) | ||
| Birth country father | Country of study | 89.1 (541) | 91.0 (436) | 0.302 Ω |
| Other | 10.9 (66) | 9.0 (43) | ||
| Highest education mother | Primary | 1.9 (12) | 2.3 (11) | < 0.001 Ω |
| Intermediate | 45.9 (283) | 15.9 (76) | ||
| Higher | 52.1 (321) | 81.8 (392) | ||
| Highest education father | Primary | 1.1 (7) | 5.0 (24) | < 0.001 Ω |
| Intermediate | 30.6 (187) | 19.5 (93) | ||
| Higher | 68.2 (417) | 75.5 (360) | ||
| Mother's working status | No paid work | 18.2 (111) | 10.0 (47) | < 0.001 Ω |
| Part-time | 66.7 (407) | 21.1 (99) | ||
| Full-time | 15.1 (92) | 68.9 (324) | ||
| Father's working status | No paid work | 6.5 (39) | 9.0 (42) | 0.067 Ω |
| Part-time | 8.8 (53) | 5.8 (27) | ||
| Full-time | 84.6 (507) | 85.2 (396) | ||
| Total | 56.2 (616) | 43.8 (480) | ||
Age presented as means (SD), other factors % (n).
Percentages are valid percent, missing values excluded, therefore the sum of n is not always the sum of participants. Most missing values concern father's working status (2.9%, n = 32).
†p value calculated using t-test
Ω p values calculated using Chi-Square, level of significance p < 0.05
Comparison of results on the N-GAMS subscales
| Main effect country | Main effect sex | Interaction effect | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GS | 3.43 (0.58) | 3.43 (0.53) | 3.30 (0.66) | 3.37 (0.64) | 5.87 (3, 1054) | 0.016 | 0.006 | NS | NS | ||||
| GRIP | 2.52 (0.59) | 2.27 (0.51) | 1.96 (0.74) | 1.70 (0.59) | 221.34 (3, 1076) | < 0.001 | 0.171 | 43.97 | < 0.001 | 0.039 | NS | ||
| GRID | 2.44 (0.60) | 2.43 (0.55) | 2.07 (0.76) | 2.00 (0.72) | 93.96 (3, 1073) | < 0.001 | 0.081 | NS | NS | ||||
Univariate analysis of variance used, significant results shown.
GS: gender sensitivity, GRI-P: gender role ideology towards patients, GRI-D: gender role ideology towards doctors.
N represents total number of participants, missing values excluded: GS 3.8%, n = 38, GRI-P 1.5%, n = 16, GRI-D 1.7%, n = 19.
Relationship between background variables and outcome on N-GAMS subscales through linear regression stratified by country
| Variable | Categories | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Man (ref) | ||||||
| Woman | -0.013 | 0.077 | -0.217*** | -0.189*** | 0.005 | -0.043 | |
| Age | 0.158*** | 0.186** | -0.025 | -0.190** | 0.040 | -0.084 | |
| Birth country | Country of study (ref) | ||||||
| Other | 0.059 | 0.008 | 0.001 | 0.052 | -0.025 | 0.084 | |
| Sexuality | Heterosexual (ref) | ||||||
| Other | -0.007 | 0.095 | 0.003 | -0.067 | -0.028 | 0.015 | |
| Civil status | Single (ref) | ||||||
| Cohabiting/Married | 0.046 | -0.023 | -0.042 | 0.029 | -0.060 | 0.002 | |
| Birth country father | Country of study (ref) | ||||||
| Other | -0.166* | -0.094 | 0.045 | 0.008 | 0.124 | -0.013 | |
| Birth country mother | Country of study (ref) | ||||||
| Other | -0.003 | 0.053 | 0.025 | -0.063 | -0.068 | -0.020 | |
| Education father | Low (ref) | ||||||
| Intermediate | -0.080 | 0.098 | -0.254 | 0.064 | 0.084 | 0.095 | |
| High | -0.023 | 0.172 | -0.290 | 0.039 | 0.032 | 0.087 | |
| Education Mother | Low (ref) | ||||||
| Intermediate | 0.018 | -0.111 | 0.305 | -0.332** | 0.231 | -0.261* | |
| High | 0.102 | -0.068 | 0.289 | -0.319* | 0.179 | -0.231 | |
| Working status father | No work (ref) | ||||||
| Part-time | -0.025 | 0.041 | 0.069 | -0.033 | 0.115 | -0.068 | |
| Full-time | 0.031 | 0.092 | 0.107 | -0.017 | 0.150* | -0.048 | |
| status mother | No work (ref) | ||||||
| Part-time | 0.024 | -0.115 | -0.023 | -0.091 | 0.026 | -0.090 | |
| Full-time | -0.026 | -0.130 | 0.029 | -0.073 | 0.029 | -0.071 | |
| R2 total | 0.036 | 0.031 | 0.041 | 0.052 | 0.005 | -0.009 | |
GS: gender sensitivity, GRI-P: gender role ideology towards patients, GRI-D: gender role ideology towards doctors.
Numbers shown are standardized regression coefficient (Beta).
*p < 0.05
** p < 0.01
***p < 0.001