| Literature DB >> 36035737 |
Shannon M Ruzycki1,2, Chanda McFadden3, Jessica Jenkins4, Vikas Kuriachan4, Michelle Keir4.
Abstract
Background: Gender- and sex-based harassment and discrimination are consistently reported by about 50% of women physicians, and the prevalence may be even greater among women in cardiology. An exploration of these experiences and their impacts on women in healthcare is necessary to design interventions, create supports, and facilitate empathy, support, and allyship among leadership.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36035737 PMCID: PMC9402956 DOI: 10.1016/j.cjco.2022.04.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CJC Open ISSN: 2589-790X
Definitions of terms used to classify harassment and discrimination in this article
| Term | Definition | Additional information/Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Gender-based discrimination | “Any distinction, exclusion, or restriction made on the basis of sex” | “Sex” includes all forms of gender identity and gender expression |
| Sexual harassment | “Engaging in a course of vexatious (eg, annoying or distressing) comment or conduct that is known or ought to be known to be unwelcome” | Includes (though is not limited to) “sexual jokes or innuendo”, continuously interrupt(ing) a female employee during meetings”, “commenting on her physical appearance in a way that sets her apart from male employees,” “leering or inappropriate staring”, “repetitive use of terms of endearment such as ‘sweetheart’ . . . as ‘terms of diminishment’” and “bragging about sexual prowess” |
| Gender-based harassment | A subtype of sexual harassment; “Any behaviour that polices and reinforces traditional heterosexual gender norms” | Includes (though is not limited to) “harassment for gender non-conformity,” “humilat(ion) with sexual and sexist remarks, jokes, materials, or pranks,” “target(ing) women for harassment as a means of dissuasion” from work in male-dominated spaces, or being told to “wear make-up, have her hair styled,” or to “wear skirts more often” |
| Sexual assault | A subtype of sexual harassment; “Any unwanted act of a sexual nature that is imposed on another person without their consent” | Includes situations where consent is not possible due to power dynamics such as patient-provider, trainee-physician, and boss-employee relationships |
| Microaggressions | Intentional or unintentional “brief and commonplace verbal, behavioural, or environmental indignities that communicate hostile, derogatory, or negative messages about historically stigmatized groups” | Includes (though is not limited to) othering people by ‘complimenting’ their English proficiency, asking where someone is |
Participants reported a range of sex- and gender-based harassment and discrimination
| Category of harassment or discrimination | Exemplar quotation |
|---|---|
| Microaggression | “[The surgeons] would be asking opinions on what to do with people. And I would say ‘This guy should be managed medically. You should not take him to surgery.’ And they’d be like, ‘Oh yea.’ Then one of the male cardiologists would say ‘Yea, you shouldn’t take him to surgery.’ As soon as the guy said it . . . that’s what we’re going to do, but if I said it? Not so much.” (P12) |
| Sexual innuendo | “He said to me . . . ‘We’re going to ride her like a rented mule’ . . . he said it like it was funny, but also like it was a bit of a threat.” (P10) |
| Maternal discrimination | “When you are in the [specialty] lab . . . there’s extra lead, it’s double heavy . . . they would make me stand there until I almost passed out, they wouldn’t give me a stool when I was four, five months pregnant. And then they would make fun of me when I had to sit down . . . [one cardiologist said] ‘Better not show up to my lab looking like that, pregnant and having to sit” (P10) |
| Sexual harassment | “. . . so he walked up from behind and comes around me . . . and he says ‘You look as good from the back as you do from the front.’” (P12) |
| Sexual assault | “Well, I got felt up as a medical student . . . by staff . . . when I was on elective” (P02) |
“Brief and commonplace verbal, behavioural, or environmental indignities that communicate hostile, derogatory, or negative messages about historically stigmatized groups” which may be intentional or unintentional.
“Any behaviour that polices and reinforces traditional heterosexual gender norms,” including “continuously interrupt(ing) a female employee during meetings,” “commenting on her physical appearance in a way that sets her apart from male employees,” “leering or inappropriate staring,” and “bragging about sexual prowess.”
“Any unwanted act of a sexual nature that is imposed on another person without their consent.”
Barriers to formal reporting of harassment identified in this study and mitigation strategies for institutional leadership
| Barrier to reporting harassment | Exemplar quotation | Suggested improvement |
|---|---|---|
| Lack of clear infrastructure | “I just didn't know what to say. Yeah, and I just didn't even know who to say it to” (P04) | A clear, well-advertised process for reporting that addresses the spectrum of harassment and discrimination |
| Lack of leadership support | “Yeah, we beat ourselves up about it. We go to the director, they don't take it seriously. And then you're beating yourself more, like am I just this hysterical lady…? You demean yourself [reporting] it, too. And I don't want to demean myself . . . the victim [is] in a place of shame, feeling like they have no control.” (P06) | Formal training for how to accept and investigate a report of harassment or discrimination for leaders |
| Perceived outcome of reporting | “So, when I tried to address it, I went to the director and so had these conversations, and she was very supportive. And then I talked to other [specialists] and they were like, ‘Yeah, we had the same issues with this one individual, same issues. He's not a good person,’ . . . but similar things have been brought up and something needs to change. Something needs to happen.” (P06) | Systems-level pre-defined responses/consequences to a spectrum of unprofessional behaviours, including remediation or termination |
| Fears or experiences of retaliation | “[After reporting a colleague who verbally harassed her] people would come to me, behind his back, and say, ‘Yeah, I agree with you . . . he’s an asshole,’ . . . but later I find out that I was canceled [from a procedure schedule that he was in charge of] . . . and none of my other male colleagues would even stand up for me” (P08) | Retaliation policies that outline strict consequences for violations |