| Literature DB >> 31289775 |
Sasha K Shillcutt1, Sareh Parangi2,3, Sarah Diekman4, Reem Ghalib5, Robin Schoenthaler6, Linda M Girgis7, Ranna Parekh3,8,9, Hansa Bhargava10, Julie K Silver3,11,12,13.
Abstract
Purpose: Women physicians do not advance in academic promotion or leadership at the same rate as their male counterparts. One factor contributing to academic promotion and advancement is the experience of serving in elected leadership positions. Although >400 women are running for political office in 2018, fewer than a handful are physicians and there has never been a woman physician elected to the Congress. Yet, little is known about women physicians who run for elected positions within their institutions, medical/professional societies, or government. This study sought to examine how women physicians experience elections using a cross-sectional survey of women physicians to gain insight into patterns of reported experiences and perceived barriers to elected leadership positions.Entities:
Keywords: elections; gender equity; leadership; women in medicine; women physicians
Year: 2019 PMID: 31289775 PMCID: PMC6608691 DOI: 10.1089/heq.2018.0101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Equity ISSN: 2473-1242
Survey Questions of Women Physician Participants
| Election history and outcomes |
| (1) Have you ran for an elected office during your school (high school thru medical school) years? |
| (2) If yes, did you win? |
| (3) Since you finished your medical training have you ever run for an elected office at your workplace? |
| (4) If you ran for an elected office at work, did you win? |
| (5) Since you finished your medical training have you ever run for an elected office at medical or other professional society? |
| (6) If you ran for an elected office at a medical or professional society, did you win? |
| (7) Since you finished your medical training have you ever run for an elected political/government office (local, regional, national)? |
| (8) If you ran for an elected political/government office, did you win? |
| Reasons to run for elected positions |
| (1) In the past, have you considered running for an elective position? |
| (2) In the past, has anyone encouraged you to run for office? |
| (3) Who has encouraged you to run for office? |
| (4) Did the person/people who encouraged you to run in the past offer specific support that would help you to be successful in your candidacy? |
| (5) What else would encourage you to run for office? |
| Barriers to running for elected positions |
| (1) When considering whether you will run for an elected position in the future, what PERSONAL BARRIERS do you think you will face for an elective position? |
| (2) When considering whether you will run for an elected position in the future, what OTHER BARRIERS do you think you will face? |
| Women physicians in elected positions |
| (1) It is important to have women physicians in elected offices, because they provide value in improving health care delivery. |
| (2) It is important to have women physicians in elected offices in medical and/or professional societies, because they provide value to the organization. |
| (3) It is important to have women physicians in elected government/political offices, because they provide a more balanced dialogue over important policy issues. |
| (4) More women physicians should be in elected positions at work. |
| (5) More women physicians should be in elected positions in medical and/or professional societies. |
| (6) More women physicians should be in elected positions in the government. |
| Future possibility of running for elected positions |
| (1) In the future, I would consider running for an elected office at work. |
| (2) In the future, I would consider running for an elected office at a medical or professional society. |
| (3) In the future, I would consider running for an elected political office. |
| (4) Learning more about disparities in compensation, promotion and other problems for women physicians has encouraged me to consider running for office in the future. |
| (5) Learning more about how patients are suffering and the need for policy changes has encouraged me to consider running for office in the future. |
| (6) Watching the current people in office do their jobs ineffectively has encouraged me to consider running for office in the future. |
| (7) If I was connected to a team of highly skilled individuals who offered me both training and financial support, I would consider running for political office in the future. |
Demographics of Women Physician Participants (Female Gender, N=100%)
| Survey participants | |
|---|---|
| Age, years | |
| 20–29 | 8 (0.7) |
| 30–39 | 639 (52.3) |
| 40–49 | 478 (39.1) |
| 50–59 | 80 (6.5) |
| 60–69 | 12 (1.0) |
| 70 plus | 2 (0.2) |
| No response | 2 (0.2) |
| Ethnicity | |
| Hispanic | 83 (6.8) |
| Race | |
| Non-Hispanic White or Euro-American | 910 (74.5) |
| Asian, Pacific Islander | 208 (17.0) |
| Black, Afro-Caribbean, or African American | 54 (4.4) |
| South Asian or Indian American | 17 (1.4) |
| Native American or Alaskan | 8 (0.7) |
| Other/no response | 8 (0.7) |
| Middle Eastern or Arab American | 7 (0.6) |
| East Asian or Asian American | 5 (0.4) |
| Latino or Hispanic American | 4 (0.3) |
| Level of medical training | |
| Attending/practicing physician | 1148 (94.0) |
| Nonpracticing physician | 19 (1.6) |
| Fellow | 26 (2.1) |
| Resident | 26 (2.1) |
| Medical student | 1 (0.1) |
| Practice setting | |
| University/academic | 543 (44.5) |
| Private practice | 379 (31.0) |
| Other | 235 (19.2) |
| Self-employed | 30 (2.5) |
| N/A | 8 (0.8) |
| Primary medical specialty | |
| Internal medicine | 270 (22.1) |
| Other (ethics, genetics, hospice, etc.) | 19 (15.6) |
| Pediatrics | 159 (13) |
| Family medicine | 152 (12.4) |
| Obstetrics and gynecology | 104 (8.5) |
| Surgery | 82 (6.7) |
| Anesthesiology | 74 (6) |
| Emergency medicine | 74 (6) |
| Psychiatry | 64 (5.2) |
| Physical medicine and rehabilitation | 37 (3) |
| Neurology | 35 (2.9) |
| Radiology | 35 (2.9) |
| Critical care medicine | 21 (1.7) |
| Pathology | 21 (1.7) |
| Dermatology | 13 (1) |
| Ophthalmology | 19 (1.6) |
| Pathology | 21 (1.7) |
| Working status | |
| Full time | 1014 (83) |
| Part time | 118 (15.4) |
| Currently not working/no response | 19 (1.5) |
| Relationship status | |
| Married | 1129 (92.4) |
| In a committed relationship | 45 (3.7) |
| Single/other/no response | 48 (3.9) |
| Children | |
| 1 or more school-aged children | 1062 (87) |
| Adult child(ren) only older than 18 years | 63 (5.2) |
| No children | 61 (5) |
| 1 or more nonschool-aged children | 34 (2.8) |
| No response | 1 (0.1) |
Survey Responses from Women Physicians on Elections
| Ran for office, % ( | Won an election, % ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Election history and outcomes | ||
| High school, medical school, residency and fellowship | 43.8 (535) | 38.8 (474) |
| Postmedical training | 16.7 (204) | 12.1 (148) |
| Ran for office at workplace | 16.7 (204) | 12.1 (148) |
| Ran for office at medical/professional society | 13.5 (165) | 9.9 (121) |
| Ran for government office (local, regional, national) | 0.9 (11) | 0.7 (8) |
| Experience with running for elected positions | ||
| Considered running for an elected position in the past | 43.2 (527) | |
| Has been encouraged to run for elected position in the past | 29.5 (360) | |
| Boss/supervisor encouraged her to run for office | 8.3 (101) | |
| Beliefs on women physicians in elected positions | Agree/strongly agree | |
| It is important to have women physicians in elected offices because | ||
| They provide value in improving health care delivery | 95 (1161) | |
| They provide value to the organization | 96.9 (1183) | |
| They provide a more balanced dialogue over important policy | 94.5 (1154) | |
| More women physicians should be in elected positions in | ||
| Workplace | 95.4 (1165) | |
| Medical and/or professional societies | 96.3 (1176) | |
| Government | 95.9 (1170) | |
| Future possibility of running for elected positions | Agree/strongly agree | |
| In the future, I would consider running for an elected office at | ||
| Workplace | 55.1 (672) | |
| Medical and/or professional societies | 49.6 (606) | |
| Government | 17.8 (217) | |
| Perceived barriers to running for elected positions in the future | ||
| Lost time from family | 87.1 (1063) | |
| Lack of experience | 57.5 (702) | |
| Uncomfortable with self-promotion | 50.6 (618) | |
| Lack of mentorship | 43.8 (535) | |

Drop-off of women physicians running for elected positions.

Reported data on women physicians running for elected positions in their institutions, medical/professional societies, and government.