You would expect women to flourish in medicine. Since 1996, women have outnumbered men in Australian medical schools. More than half of general practice trainees, two out of three paediatric trainees, and close to three in four obstetricians in training are women.
Look at surgical training and this pattern stops: fewer than one in three surgical trainees are women, and the numbers fall further as doctors reach advanced training. Just 9% of surgeons in Australia are women.
Late last week, vascular surgeon Dr Gabrielle McMullin unleashed a storm by suggesting
that sexual harassment was common in surgical training. She said
gaining redress was so compromised that if a female doctor was
propositioned, providing a sexual favour may be the only way to sustain
her career.
Data from medical schools in the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia all confirm that sexual harassment occurs in medical school. A 2005 US study
of medical students found 92.8% of female students had experienced,
observed or heard about at least one incident of gender discrimination
and sexual harassment during medical school. This harassment continues into specialist training.
Systemic bullying and harassment ranges from
crass sexualised jokes, inappropriate touching and crass commentary on
female doctors' bodies, to frank requests for sexual favours. Some of
these may occur in public, but much is unwitnessed.
Women doctors report
that they may be able to manage harassment by patients and by their
peers, but harassment from supervisors is much more difficult to deal
with. Many women doctors are reluctant to come forward and develop
feelings of guilt and resignation.
Sexual harassment occurs within a larger culture of discrimination against women in post-graduate medical training. A recent US study of female surgeons found 87% experienced gender-based discrimination in medical school, 88% in residency and 91% in practice.
Anecdotal reports suggest some women trainees are asked at interview
about their intentions to have children, or advised that only certain
careers are suitable for women with children. When employed, some female
trainees report being given job contracts that are structured so they
can never meet the criteria for maternity leave. Others say their
rosters make it impossible to carry on with a career while maintaining
caring responsibilities.
The toxicity of surgical training arises because it’s highly
hierarchical, male-dominated, and – like most hospital-based training in
the specialties – involves an intense apprenticeship training mode.
Career advancement depends on personal recommendation from supervisors,
and careers can be stymied by withholding this.
Junior doctors face increasing pressure for specialist training
places. Although positions for many specialties are gradually
increasing, this is out of kilter with the large increase in medical
graduates, following the establishment of new medical schools over the
last ten years.
In a high-pressure surgical environment, where older male consultants
dominate, and there is great competition for training positions and
jobs, women can often find themselves in very poor bargaining positions,
vulnerable to sexual harassment.
Although female surgeons may face the worst of sexual harassment, this culture is endemic to medicine more generally and is so common that many doctors do not even notice it. A recurrent theme expressed by victims is the difficulty being believed, and once believed, not seeing any consequences for the perpetrator.
Sexual harassment is fundamentally about power. Saying sexual
harassment is about “sex” is like hitting someone over the head with a
shovel and calling it gardening. Identifying sexual harassment as it
occurs can prove challenging for the doctors and medical students
involved, especially if senior peers, including women, laugh it off or
engage in collaborative bullying.
Nor is it limited to women. Bullying on the basis of sexual preference, race and age have all been reported in the medical workplace.
To solve the problem, we first need acknowledgement that career
repression via sexual harassment, bullying and humiliation occurs, and
that victims are not supported when they report.
We also must recognise that full-time apprenticeship mode of
training, particularly when there are limited training positions, places
junior doctors in a structurally vulnerable position.
We need more and broader modes of training. Part-time training
remains unusual in most training programs except general practice.
There are currently six part-time surgical trainees,
accounting for 0.5% of all training positions in surgery, despite
evidence that these trainees are as successful as full-time trainees.
The Royal Australasian College of Surgeons' announcement
yesterday that it will establish an expert advisory committee into
bullying and harassment is very welcome. Other specialist colleges
should also review harassment in their own programs.
Written policies on harassment in the workplace have existed for many
years in health workplaces, but they have not changed the culture. It
is time for a concerted approach from both colleges and hospitals to
recognise and embrace the kinds of changes that will make medical
training inclusive and safe for all medical graduates.
SOURCE:
Theconversation



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