Setting the Scene – women in clinical academia • • • • UCL Gender Equality Event March 18 2008 Prof Debbie Sharp University of Bristol and Medical Schools Council.

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Transcript Setting the Scene – women in clinical academia • • • • UCL Gender Equality Event March 18 2008 Prof Debbie Sharp University of Bristol and Medical Schools Council.

Setting the Scene – women in
clinical academia
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UCL Gender Equality Event
March 18 2008
Prof Debbie Sharp
University of Bristol and Medical
Schools Council
Women in Clinical Academia
Attracting and Developing the Medical
and Dental Workforce of the Future
The rationale for this work
• The crisis in recruitment and retention in
academic medicine and dentistry
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The annual CHMS staffing surveys
The request from MWF to include gender in the
CHMS reports
The increasing proportion of women entering
medical schools
The ‘Walport’ initiative
Problems in the NHS
Are women making it?
Clinical academics at UK medical schools
100
90
80
70
60
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40
30
20
10
0
Female
Male
Professor
Reader/Senior
Lecturer
Medical Schools Council Report 2007
Lecturer
Terms of reference
• To review the current position of women in clinical
academia by grade and specialty with reference to
the international position
• To identify the most important issues which appear to
be militating against attracting women into clinical
academia and identify those that may be remediable
• To provide recommendations for where action needs
to be taken to encourage recruitment and retention of
women in clinical academia
Process
• Main working party
• Subgroups
– Student perceptions
– Learning from experience
– Flexible working lives
– Best practice in HR
– International perspectives
Students
“Academic makes you think more about constantly
having your head in a book, rather than actual hands-on
clinical work”
“I think that the general view is that it does take you
away from being on the wards, and I just have an image
of spending time in a lab”.
“We need more information about it. If something is
surrounded with myth and legend it is never going to be
attractive, especially when the myths and legends aren’t
very nice”.
Role models
“Strong women are seen as scary, strong men are
seen
as admirable”
“I sat in a neurosurgery clinic and a consultant came
up
to me and said, ‘To be honest, if you want a family
you
can’t do neurosurgery’”.
“I am always really impressed when I see a professor
with
Walport
• the pathway
– AF2s
– ACFs
– (PhD programme)
– CLs
– Clinician scientists/HEFCE CSLs
– Professors
Barriers to success
1. Historical under-representation explains current
disparity? → time will remedy inequality
– Steady increase in women medical students: 1576
(1991) – 3798 (2006) but much smaller increase in
proportion of female professors
– NEJM cohort study – less women going into
academic medicine in later cohorts
2. Differences in self-assessed competency?
– gender differences in self-assessed competencies of
research knowledge and skills
Barriers to success
3. Women are not as good at science
compared with men?
– No mean differences in science
performance in early school years
– More women than men undertake
intercalated degrees & often gain a higher
degree classification than men
Barriers to success
4. Gender discrimination?
– Q survey of female professors and their male
colleagues – 76 women and 75 men
– Women – more structural and ‘people’ obstacles,
more career breaks, more working part time
– Fewer unsuccessful promotion experiences ( ?
response bias)
– Fewer ‘merit awards’
– More aware of support required and received
– Surgical specialties particularly tough
Barriers to success
What they said!
“Attitude problem: a female with kids plus interested
in research equals disaster in a surgical specialty
dominated by men”
“He was just inspirational – a role model as to how
you can be a top professor and a fantastic
clinician”
“ As a trainee, my male colleague was offered more
demanding but more interesting things to do: a
new lecture, outside presentations etc before me. I
had to work hard and be a ‘bit pushy’ to get this
kind of experience”
Barriers to success
5. Women academics are less
productive?
– spend less time in research and more in
teaching and patient care
– fewer publications (particularly in women
with children) - may be due to lack of
mentors
– fewer grants – may be due to being in
lower grade
– are more likely to work part time
Barriers to success
6. Women are less ambitious?
– qualitative and quantitative studies suggest similar
ambitions and interests in men and women
– women less likely to actually apply for posts
– women have more concerns about potential
conflict between being a good parent and career
– academia does not facilitate the balancing of
these competing roleseed
– we need better HR systems and support
How far have we come?
“I come here today….to tell you that
coeducation has proved an absolute failure,
from our standpoint. When I tell you that
33.3% of the ladies, students, admitted to
John’s Hopkins Hospital at the end of our
short session are to be married, then I tell you
that coeducation is a failure.”
Sir William Osler, 1894
Role models
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Elizabeth Blackwell
Born in Bristol 1821
First woman to qualify in USA
Rejected by every medical school in NYC and
Philadelphia
• Applied to Geneva Medical College in NY State
• All male student body voted on her admission
and as a practical joke they voted ‘yes’
unanimously
• She graduated 2 years later
THE USA
• ‘The potential of most women (in medicine) is
being wasted’.1
– Women lag behind their male colleagues in
attaining positions of leadership and authority in
academic medicine, professional organisations
and institutions
– Less likely to be adequately mentored
– Less likely to have same sex role models
1 Report of American Association of Medical Colleges 2002
My
Department
The Headlines
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This is not just a womens’ issue
Our students do not understand the term clinical academia
Too few senior female academics to act as role models
Discrimination has been a problem in certain specialties
Mentorship is vital
Flexible working opportunities in NHS and academia
needed
Most medical schools need to improve HR processes
UK not so very different from US/Australia but Scandinavia
does it better
There is a lot of work to do!
The future
Some ideas:
• Views of NHS consultants and junior
doctors about academic medicine
• Flexible training
• Identification of clinical academic
careers lead in each medical school
• Identification of senior academic
womens’ lead in each medical school
• Learning from others