| Literature DB >> 27790362 |
Juliana M Kling1, Steven H Rose2, Lisa N Kransdorf1, Thomas R Viggiano3, Virginia M Miller4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Addressing healthcare disparities is a national priority for initiatives in precision and individualized medicine. An essential component of precision medicine is the understanding that sex and gender influence health and disease. Whether these issues are addressed in post-graduate medical education curricula is unknown.Entities:
Keywords: Gender-based medicine; Medical residency; Post-graduate medical education; Precision medicine; Sex-based medicine
Year: 2016 PMID: 27790362 PMCID: PMC5073974 DOI: 10.1186/s13293-016-0097-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Participant characteristics
|
| |
|---|---|
| Mayo Campus | |
| Arizona | 42 (22.7) |
| Florida | 17 (9.2) |
| Minnesota | 126 (68.1) |
| Post-graduate year | |
| PGY-1 | 35 (18.8) |
| PGY-2 | 33 (17.7) |
| PGY-3 | 34 (18.3) |
| PGY-4 | 23 (12.4) |
| PGY-5 | 30 (16.1) |
| PGY-6 | 18 (9.7) |
| PGY-7 | 9 (4.8) |
| Other (PGY-8, 9, and 10) | 4 (2.2) |
| Which residency program? | |
| Anesthesia | 18 (9.8) |
| Internal medicine | 72 (39.1) |
| Neurology | 12 (6.5) |
| Obstetrics/gynecology | 5 (2.72) |
| Psychiatry | 8 (4.4) |
| Radiology | 8 (4.4) |
| Surgery | 14 (7.6) |
| Other (family medicine, transplant, hand surgery) | 16 (8.7) |
Residency programs not displayed include dermatology, emergency medicine, laboratory medicine and pathology, neurologic surgery, ophthalmology, orthopedic surgery, otorhinolaryngology, pediatrics, physical medicine and rehabilitation, preventive medicine, psychology, radiation oncology, and urology (each represented less than 4 % of the participants)
Responses demonstrating participants’ educational experience
|
| |
|---|---|
| During your training, have your instructors and/or preceptors discussed how a patient’s sex or gender impacts your evaluation, interpretation, treatment, or counseling of a patient? | |
| Always | 8 (4.0) |
| Frequently | 51 (25.8) |
| Occasionally | 108 (54.6) |
| Never | 31 (15.7) |
| During your residency training, have you conducted research or been part of a research study that has included sex and/or gender as a variable beyond being included in the demographics? | |
| Yes | 47 (23.5) |
| No | 140 (70.0) |
| I’m not sure | 13 (6.5) |
| How have you seen concepts related to the impact of sex and gender on medicine being integrated into your medical training | |
| Online | 45 (24.5) |
| Lecture | 113 (61.4) |
| Simulation center | 37 (21.1) |
| Chalk talks | 24 (13.0) |
| Case-based teaching | 83 (45.1) |
| It was not included | 49 (26.6) |
| How have you seen concepts related to the impact of sex and gender on medicine being integrated into your residency training? (Multiple selections per response) | |
| Online | 38 (20.8) |
| Lecture | 93 (50.8) |
| Simulation center | 15 (8.2) |
| Chalk talks | 25 (13.7) |
| Case-based teaching | 80 (43.7) |
| It was not included | 47 (25.7) |
Select general knowledge questions and responses
| Questions | Male | Female | |
|---|---|---|---|
| % ( | % ( |
| |
| Myocardial hypertrophy with preserved ejection fraction is more common in… | |||
|
| 64.7 (22) | 35.3 (12) | 0.09 |
| Men |
|
| 0.81 |
| Same in both women and men | 39.1 (9) | 60.9 (14) | 0.30 |
| Not sure | 33.3 (21) | 63.5 (40) |
|
| Chronic pain is more common in… | |||
|
|
|
| 0.13 |
| Men | 66.7 (4) | 33.3 (2) | 0.41 |
| The same in both women and men | 46.7 (7) | 46.7 (7) | 0.80 |
| Not sure | 57.1 (4) | 28.6 (2) | 0.71 |
| Idiopathic pulmonary hypertension is more common in… | |||
|
|
|
| 0.79 |
| Men | 34.6 (9) | 65.4 (17) | 0.12 |
| Both women and men | 50.0 (5) | 50.0 (5) | 1.00 |
| Not sure | 30.0 (9) | 66.7 (20) |
|
| Lower esophageal cancer is more common in… | |||
| Women | 33.3 (3) | 66.7 (6) | 0.32 |
|
|
|
| 0.21 |
| Both women and men | 60.0 (3) | 40.0 (2) | 0.65 |
| Not sure | 50.0 (16) | 46.9 (15) | 1.00 |
| Women with anginal symptoms often go untreated. Why do you think that is the case? | |||
| Women may present with atypical symptoms such as nausea, dizziness, and fatigue | 42.2 (19) | 57.8 (26) | 0.30 |
| Cardiovascular disease is not always considered in the differential diagnosis of women | 50.0 (3) | 50.0 (3) | 1.00 |
| Women’s complaints are attributed to psychological stress | 25.0 (1) | 75.0 (3) | 0.32 |
|
|
|
| 0.38 |
| I’m not sure | 66.7 (2) | 0.0 (0) | 0.56 |
| Daily aspirin is recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) for different reasons in men and women. In men (aged 45 to 79), it is used to prevent… | |||
|
| 41.0 (25) | 59.0 (36) | 0.16 |
| Stroke | 55.6 (5) | 44.4 (4) | 0.74 |
| Both myocardial infarction and stroke |
|
| 0.58 |
| It is not recommended for prevention | 47.2 (17) | 50.0 (18) | 0.74 |
| After an osteoporotic hip fracture… | |||
| Women are twice as likely to die | 53.7 (29) | 46.3 (25) | 0.59 |
|
| 42.9 (6) | 50 (7) | 0.59 |
| There is no difference | 42.5 (17) | 57.5 (23) | 0.34 |
| I’m not sure |
|
| 0.11 |
| Female smokers… | |||
| Have the same risk for developing COPD and lung cancer as male smokers |
|
| 0.23 |
|
| 44.2 (23) | 53.8 (28) | 0.41 |
| I’m not sure | 48.5 (32) | 50.0 (33) | 0.81 |
p value represents the difference between male and female responses for each answer choice. Italicized question choice indicates the correct answer. Bolded answer choice indicates the answer that was chosen most frequently by participants
Selected open-ended survey responses
| How would you incorporate information regarding sex and gender into your training and clinical practice? |
| Almost 100 % of carrying out the clinical work in my specialty does not depend on gender/sex difference of disease. |
| I am an Ob/Gyn so I only see women. |
| Rarely, except for OB it is not really that important |
| Care of transgender individuals |
| The rise of transgendered persons makes me more apt to ask about sex determined risk such as cardiovascular risks. |
| What barriers do you see to learning more about the impact of sex and gender in your medical practice? |
| There is limited time to learn all of clinical medicine. Depending on the topic, if sex/gender represents only a small part of outcome differences, then it is a fringe issue that should be prioritized low on what I would spend time learning. |
| It’s really not too relevant in my field. |
| I care exclusively for women. |
| Lack of separate brochures for men and women |
| Massively politicized—with potential for career damage depending on clinician’s views/beliefs |
| Discomfort among staff to discuss gender-based discussions and lifestyle variations |
| Gender, different than sex, the transgender patient, celebrities raising non-gender kids |
| It’s difficult to bring up. I don’t want to make the person I’m taking to feel uncomfortable, and I don’t want them to label me as someone who is overly sensitive to women’s issues. |