| Literature DB >> 27729822 |
Jacqueline M Van Wyk1, Soornarain S Naidoo2, Kogie Moodley1, Susan B Higgins-Opitz3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Following policy implementations to redress previous racial and gender discrepancies, this study explored how gender impacted on the clinical experiences of final-year medical students during their undergraduate training. It also gathered their perceptions and expectations for the future.Entities:
Keywords: South Africa; challenges; opportunities; racial stereotypes; stigma; students
Year: 2016 PMID: 27729822 PMCID: PMC5042188 DOI: 10.2147/AMEP.S107304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Med Educ Pract ISSN: 1179-7258
Demographic profile of participants (N=94)
| Demographic characteristic | n | % |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Male | 33 | 35 |
| Female | 61 | 65 |
| Age (years) | ||
| Range | 21–46 | |
| Median (± SD) | 23 (±4) | |
| Marital status | ||
| Single | 90 | 96 |
| Married | 4 | 4 |
| Race | ||
| Black | 61 | 65 |
| Colored | 6 | 6 |
| Indian | 24 | 26 |
| White | 3 | 3 |
| Religious groups | ||
| Christian | 73 | 78 |
| Hindu | 11 | 12 |
| Islamic | 8 | 8 |
| Nonpracticing/other | 2 | 2 |
Abbreviation: SD, standard deviation.
Participant’s perceptions of the impact of gender on their clinical practice
| Questions explored | Respondents, excluding unsure | Yes | No | Fisher’s exact test, | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male, n (%) | Female, n (%) | Male, n (%) | Female, n (%) | |||
| Do you think that medicine is a male-dominated profession? | n=32 males | 22 (68.76) | 37 (62.71) | 10 (31.25) | 22 (37.29) | 0.764 |
| Will male domination impact on you as an intern? | n=25 males | 5 (20.00) | 15 (34.09) | 20 (80.00) | 29 (65.91) | 0.509 |
| Are there obstacles for females to practice medicine? | n=31 males | 18 (58.06) | 32 (60.38) | 13 (41.94) | 21 (39.62) | 0.669 |
| Are there obstacles for males to practice? | n=29 males | 5 (17.25) | 10 (18.87) | 24 (82.76) | 43 (51.13) | 0.931 |
| Are there obstacles for females to perform intimate examinations on male patients? | n=29 males | 15 (51.72) | 29 (51.79) | 14 (48.28) | 27 (48.21) | 0.133 |
| Are there obstacles for males to conduct intimate examinations on female patients? | n=30 males | 15 (50.00) | 29 (51.79) | 15 (50.00) | 27 (48.21) | 1.00 |
| Is there any advantage to being male/female in clinical medicine at this point in South African history? | n=32 males | 20 (62.50) | 28 (46.67) | 12 (37.50) | 32 (53.33) | 0.29 |
Themes and subthemes emanating from participants’ comments
| Questions explored | Main themes | Subthemes | Quotes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Do you think that medicine is a male-dominated profession? | Female | “Yes. I think it will be challenging to be accepted. It is harder to be accepted than the males because of ‘competency issues’”. [AF-B11] | |
| Competency | Having to work harder; patients’ beliefs; lack of trust in female decision making | “… just that you feel that in medicine sometimes, you need to be a male to be able to decide some things, even if you’re female,.. like your decisions.. they [patients] tend to, they don’t put much trust in you because you are a female, yah.” [AF-E2] | |
| Will male domination impact on you as an intern? | Male | “It should not have a negative impact on me; I will be able to work under any condition.” [AM-D17] | |
| None | Still optimistic; no threat | “The increased female intake may affect me. Specialties such as Surgery are calling for more women.” [IF-B1] | |
| Fewer posts | Limited number of specialties | “Yes, there are limited numbers of registrar posts in terms of race and females will get preference.” [IM-A16] | |
| Female | “Some disciplines are very demanding like surgery and orthopaedics on family life and require long hours. Sometimes they need physical strength to do the job.” [AM-B14] | ||
| Adaption required | Clinical practice and behavior | “If the patient refuses we usually go get a male colleague, male student, and then you stand there, and he examines them but then that doesn’t benefit you in any way because you’re not doing any examinations.” [AF-B8] | |
| Are there obstacles for female students to practice medicine? | General obstacles | Impact on family time | “Yes, … I have a friend who is a female, um, doing her community service, and although she’d like to spend time with her family, she, she just doesn’t get the time, so her family’s being compromised in that way, and I think this profession doesn’t understand that you do need time off sometimes, there is never time for just you and your family, it’s always work, work.” [IF-B27] |
| Work environment | Respect from nurses; male-dominated disciplines | “It is also difficult as a Black female in this environment. It still needs to be transformed as nurses are more willing to assist males and address them [males] as doctor than a female.” [AF-A24] | |
| Interacting with patients | Culture of patients; age; behavior; stereotypical beliefs | “Obviously, young female doctors will have difficulty with male patients between 35–40 years. The interactions are all based on cultural beliefs and values. Some patients may allow female doctors to conduct a procedure while others will simply refuse to have them present.” [AM-B20] | |
| Are there obstacles for male students to practice? | None | “I don’t think there are obstacles, it’s, as I said, it’s just you explaining to the patient what you need to do, and what they’re comfortable with”. [AM-C6] | |
| Fewer posts; older doctors are preferred | “Patients are also, they’re also clever, they know that the older we are, the experienced we are, so they would be more willing to be assessed by even an older man as opposed to a younger man.” [CM-A1] | ||
| Expected to play greater role with families; increased role in society | “Male doctors… especially young doctors, must be aware of their sexual desires and be careful of being accused by female patients.” [AM-E4] | ||
| Are there obstacles for female students to perform intimate examination on male patients? | Patient interaction | Cultural taboos | “Personally, yes, I have. Most males, especially the…older Black males would just refuse. They will refuse to be examined by you, especially when you want to do your rectal exams and all those. Some actually, I remember last year when we were doing urology it was the first block, they would refuse and they would actually ask us to go out of the consulting room, they’d only want males there, in King Edward.” [AF-B28] |
| Age | “I find that some of the male patients are a bit rude or forward towards you, so that’s an obstacle.” [AF-A24] | ||
| Respect | “… some of the patients want to give you too much information that you don’t really need ’cause you’re a female, um, and your other patients don’t wanna talk about things at all. They don’t want you to examine them at all. So it just depends on the type of patient but it is quite difficult especially to get sexual histories from males.” [IF-B17] | ||
| Are there obstacles for male students to | Patient interaction | Female patients are reluctant to disclose; patients feel shy | Ya, one of my male colleagues… the lady [patient] was reluctant to give information about the fact that she was having a discharge, to him. Ya, but she was ok, to tell me and also… she didn’t want him to examine her.” [WF-B22] |
| conduct intimate examinations on female patients? | Males are also refused | “…my friends have told me, they also have problems examining females, especially like um, breast examination, like females are very shy and don’t want to be examined.” [IF-B25] | |
| Is there any advantage to being male/female in clinical medicine at this point in South African history? | Male | “I think, ya, … you know that certain, especially our old-fashioned patients, if I should say, patients, I’m only speaking about the black race, I’m not sure about the others but older people will feel more freely to be assessed by the male doctor as opposed to the female doctor, especially the young female doctors because, in their minds they, they, you can almost say that they think the doctor should be a man, they, they, ya, they expect them to be males so if a female comes and they’re practicing they, they, that to them it’s trust, ya trust towards the doctor, who’s attending them is questionable so I think that could be advantage as to me male because I would have, I’m sure of this, I would have more trust towards the elderly.” [AF-C4] | |
| Doctors are still seen as males | Patient perceptions | “Yes. In terms of employment, we’re getting more opportunity, better posts and um, so I think and people want to give us that opportunity because maybe before we didn’t have those opportunities and I think yes, there are.” [AF-A15] | |
| Societal expectations | “Yes, more posts available for female doctors and also with sensitive issues um, uh, um, uh, female gynae visits or rape victims, there’s um, less need for a chaperone.” [AF-F14] | ||
| Female | “Females more empathetic and bond better and build better rapport with the patients. It is important if in private; patients come back; lot of patients prefer female doctors.” [AF-E8] | ||
| Preference | Increased scope | “More females will impact at a personal level for family life and maternity leave.” [AF-A15] |
Abbreviations: A, African; C, Colored; I, Indian; W, White; F, female; M, male; A–F, clinical group rotation + number.