| Literature DB >> 31179933 |
Mindi Guptill1, Ellen T Reibling2, Kathleen Clem3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study is to highlight career paths of senior women leaders in academic emergency medicine (EM) to encourage younger women to pursue leadership.Entities:
Keywords: Career progression; Emergency medicine; Gender diversity; Leadership; Women
Year: 2018 PMID: 31179933 PMCID: PMC6326160 DOI: 10.1186/s12245-018-0206-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Emerg Med ISSN: 1865-1372
Academic leadership by gender
| Men | Women | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Division heads and academic chairs [ | 2331 (84) | 437 (16) | 2768 |
| Emergency medicine chair [ | 86 (89) | 11 (11) | 97 |
| Emergency medicine faculty [ | 2867 (66) | 1484 (34) | 4351 |
Fig. 1Methodology flowchart
Clustered themes and illustrative quotations from interviews with senior female leaders in EM
| Themes | Illustrative quotations |
|---|---|
| Women leaders made an intentional decision to pursue opportunities to influence emergency medicine. | |
| Made strategic decisions and took risks | I think people in emergency medicine, we are not very good at saying, “You need me to do that?” I mean, we are really bad at walking past a crisis and not responding to it. |
| Are women leaders necessary? | I think one of the most important things is the critical mass. We need more women in leadership roles because that will make this a continued process without it being a battle to keep us there. |
| Do women leaders need to be like men? | The women who are coming up I think are still having the same baggage that we did years ago: I am not good enough. This is the imposter thing that people talk about. I mean, we have that, we all have that big-time but women have it bigger than men. |
| Gender bias | I think that women need to be aware that there is still gender bias. It may not be overt, it may not be as wide spread as it was but there is still gender bias. And when we as women assume that there is none we are doing a disservice to other women. I think women need to be aware that there is still a bias out there and take that into account when they make decisions. |
| Women sought out natural mentors and sponsors to facilitate career development. | |
| Are mentors necessary? | Mentors provide clear visioning about what people want for themselves. And it has to be real. Not what they should do, but what they really want to do. |
| Find mentors for content development and career advancement | Someone pointed out to me that one person cannot be your be all to end all whether it’s in marriage or your children or in choosing mentors. And that what you should do if you are smart is find someone to help you, who can help you with something specific that you need. I did broaden out who I asked for advice about certain things. One mentor may not be broad enough to cover all of your interests. |
| Sponsorship | Part of it is that we are not encouraged, we as women are not encouraging other women to get involved. You know there were people that had to sort of hit me over the side of the head to say you are ready. Move, go for it. |
| Establish supportive connections | I do think the networking is important, because men do networking much better. |
| Women leaders intentionally planned their out of work life to support their leadership role. | |
| Work/Life issues | Adaptations and accommodations we make around childbearing and family are very important, but the best thing you can do for a woman in that process is to tell her that you really believe in her ambition. We need to keep supporting them in feeling good about being super capable. |
| An important work focus was to help others achieve excellence. | |
| Identify and reinforce leadership potential | Do not be afraid to surround yourself with people who are better than you are. Because if you provide the right environment for them, they will grow, and you will grow with them. They will bring you their best, and you will be learning from them. |