| Literature DB >> 30196796 |
Bala Venkatesh1,2,3, Sangeeta Mehta4, Derek C Angus5,6, Simon Finfer7,8, Flavia R Machado9, John Marshall10, Imogen Mitchell11, Sandra Peake12, Janice L Zimmerman13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite increasing female enrolment into medical schools, persistent gender gaps exist in the physician workforce. There are limited published data on female representation in the critical care medicine workforce.Entities:
Keywords: Critical care; Female; Gender; Intensive care; Representation; Women; Workforce
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30196796 PMCID: PMC6130077 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-018-2139-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Map of various critical care societies registered with WFSICCM. Regions where societies responded to the WFSICCM survey in green. Survey data not available from regions in red. Areas in orange are those from which precise longitudinal data on gender representation were available. Areas in blue indicate regions with more than 500 registered members in the society
Fig. 2Illustration of proportions of female trainees, Fellows, examiners and board members of the College of Intensive Care Medicine of Australia and New Zealand between 2006 and 2017
Fig. 3Proportion of part-time trainees and deferred training posts of the College of Intensive Care Medicine of Australia and New Zealand who are female or male between 2006 and 2017
Pooled data on female trainees and specialist representation, and membership of critical care societies, in intensive care medicine from different geographic regions
| Region/country | Time period | Proportion of female trainees/specialists in the workforce |
|---|---|---|
| North America | ||
| Canada ( | 2015–2016 | 26.2% specialists |
| USA ( | 2011–2015 | 40% physicians who wrote American Board of Internal Medicine CCM certification examination |
| South America | ||
| Argentina [ | 2010 | 43% physicians who completed CCM training |
| Brazil [ | 2012 | 30.2% of specialists in ICM were women |
| Europe | ||
| France ( | 2012–2016 | 35% critical care trainees |
| Ireland [ | 2015 | 31.7% of specialists were women |
| Scandinavia ( | 2001–2017 | 42% enrolled in Scandinavian European Diploma in CCM programme |
| Spain [ | 2014 | Femininity indexb in critical care medicine 0.08 |
| UK ( | 2015 | 33% physicians practising anaesthetics/CCM; 41% in age < 40 years group |
| Asia | ||
| China | 2017 | 46% Chinese Society of CCM members |
| Indiac | 2015–2017 | 32% trainees taking CCM—Part 2 examination |
| Israel [ | 2011 | 22% of specialists were women |
| Africa | ||
| Mozambique, Guinea and Cape Verde [ | 2015 | 60% anaesthesiology and 29% internal medicine |
| Oceania | ||
| New Zealand [ | 2012 | 30% of trainees and 18% of specialists were women. |
In regions where clear numbers of trainees and specialists were not available, we have provided other relevant data relating to female participation in the ICM workforce. CCM critical care medicine
aIn a number of countries, intensive or critical care medicine does not exist as an independent specialty. Patients are often managed by anaesthesiologists or internists and those figures have been reported when intensive or critical care medicine were not explicitly stated in the reports
bRatio between the number of women and men in permanent medical positions in the specialties throughout the study period
cPersonal correspondence with Dr Praveen Jain, Chairman, College of Critical Care Medicine, India
dGrouped data reported for the three countries
Presidency of various international societies and bodies in intensive care
| Society | Number (%) of female presidents 2000–2017 |
|---|---|
| ESICMa | 0/9 (0%) |
| SCCM ( | 7/17 (41%) |
| ANZICS ( | 1/9 (11%) |
| WFSICCM | 1/5 (20%) |
| CICM of Australia and New Zealandb ( | 0/5 (0%) |
ANZICS Australia and New Zealand Intensive Care Society, CICM College of intensive Care Medicine, ESICM European Society of Intensive Care Medicine, SCCM Society of Critical Care Medicine, WFSICCM World Federation Society of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine
aPersonal correspondence with Prof. Andrew Rhodes, past president of ESICM
b Data for CICM only from 2010, the date of inception of the college
Proportion of women on the council or board of national intensive care societies from different parts of the world
| Society | Proportion of women in the council or board in 2017 (%) |
|---|---|
| North America | |
| SCCM ( | 50 |
| Canadian Critical Care Society ( | 36 |
| South America | |
| Brazil ( | 40 |
| Europe | |
| ESICM [ | 8 |
| Asia | |
| Chinese Society of Critical Care Medicine (Standing Committee of the 4th Committee of the Chinese Medical Association Critical Illness Branch) [ | 18 |
| Sri Lankan Society of Critical Care and Emergency Medicine ( | 21 |
| Africa | |
| Critical Care Society of South Africa ( | 29 |
| Oceania | |
| ANZICS ( | 14 |
| World Federation | |
| WFSICCM ( | 7 |
ANZICS Australia and New Zealand Intensive Care Society, ESICM European Society of Intensive Care Medicine, SCCM Society of Critical Care Medicine, WFSICCM World Federation Society of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine
Academic representation in major scientific meetings: proportion of female faculty
| Meeting | 2015 (%) | 2016 (%) | 2017 (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| ESICM | 15 | 15 | 16.9 |
| SCCMa | 29 | 30 | 27 |
| ISICEM | 7.5 | 11.4 | 7.8 |
| CICM of Australia and New Zealand | 7.7 | 17.2 | 34 |
CICM College of Intensive Care Medicine, ESICM European Society of Intensive Care Medicine, ISICEM International Society of Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine, SCCM Society of Critical Care Medicine
aSCCM includes a proportion of non-physician participants
Gaps in knowledge and the potential usefulness of future research in this area
| Gap in data | Significance |
|---|---|
| Precise estimates of female representation in CCM trainee and specialist workforce worldwide | Facilitate planning for workforce and gender diversity |