| Literature DB >> 31802213 |
Rahel A Kubik-Huch1, Valérie Vilgrain2,3, Gabriel P Krestin4, Maximilian F Reiser5, Ulrike I Attenberger6, Ada U Muellner7, Christopher P Hess8, Hedvig Hricak9.
Abstract
Women in Focus: Be Inspired was a unique programme held at the 2019 European Congress of Radiology that was structured to address a range of topics related to gender and healthcare, including leadership, mentoring and the generational progression of women in medicine. In most countries, women constitute substantially fewer than half of radiologists in academia or private practice despite frequently accounting for at least half of medical school enrolees. Furthermore, the proportion of women decreases at higher academic ranks and levels of leadership, a phenomenon which has been referred to as a "leaky pipeline". Gender diversity in the radiologic workplace, including in academic and leadership positions, is important for the present and future success of the field. It is a tool for excellence that helps to optimize patient care and research; moreover, it is essential to overcome the current shortage of radiologists. This article reviews the current state of gender diversity in academic and leadership positions in radiology internationally and explores a wide range of potential reasons for gender disparities, including the lack of role models and mentorship, unconscious bias and generational changes in attitudes about the desirability of leadership positions. Strategies for both individuals and institutions to proactively increase the representation of women in academic and leadership positions are suggested. KEY POINTS: • Gender-diverse teams perform better. Thus, gender diversity throughout the radiologic workplace, including in leadership positions, is important for the current and future success of the field. • Though women now make up roughly half of medical students, they remain underrepresented among radiology trainees, faculty and leaders. • Factors leading to the gender gap in academia and leadership positions in Radiology include a lack of role models and mentors, unconscious biases, other societal barriers and generational changes.Entities:
Keywords: Female; Leadership; Mentoring; Radiology; Workforce
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31802213 PMCID: PMC7033068 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-019-06493-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 5.315
Fig. 1Impressions from the programme “Women in Focus: Be Inspired” during the 2019 European Congress of Radiology in Vienna
Overview of the composition of the European Society of Radiology (ESR) membership in 2019, stratified by gender and generation (based on research undertaken by the European Society of Radiology, 2019)
| Traditionalists | Baby boomers | Generation X | Generation Y (millenials) | All generations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Born 1927–1945 | Born 1946 to 1964 | Born 1965 to 1976 | Born 1977 to 1992 | ||
| Aged 74 to 92 | Aged 55 to 73 | Aged 43 to 54 | Aged 27 to 42 | ||
| ESR members: overall | 1307 | 22,870 | 31,726 | 58,511 | 114,414 |
| 1% | 20% | 28% | 51% | 100% | |
| Male members | 1132 | 16,541 | 20,108 | 34,651 | 72,432 |
| 87% | 72% | 63% | 59% | 70% | |
| Female members | 175 | 6329 | 11,618 | 23,860 | 41,982 |
| 13% | 28% | 37% | 41% | 30% |
Fig. 2Different generations in the workplace. Future leaders will belong to generation Y or even Z. Independent of gender, the new generations have different goals and aspirations. (Based on various sources, including [23–26])
Fig. 3Demand-role congruity theory: agentic and communal traits associated with male and female gender, respectively (based on Eagly et al [28])
Fig. 4The mentoring cycle (adapted with permission from UCD People Development & Organisation Effectiveness, Human Resources, University College Dublin, http://www.ucd.ie/hr)