Attitudes toward women physicians in medical academia
A. Scadron, M. H. Witte, M. Axelrod, E. A. Greenberg, C. Arem and J. E. Meitz
To determine attitudes toward women physicians within medical academia, we
administered a survey to a probability sample of male and female senior
medical students, faculty, and top-level administrators in a randomized,
stratified subset of ten medical schools. Of the 984 respondents (65%
response rate), men were much less supportive overall than women of female
leaders. While women strongly disagreed with the idea that women physicians
who spend long hours at work neglect home and family, men were almost
equally divided on this issue. Each group rated the "typical" faculty
member as "strong, fair, and progressive," but male faculty also were
characterized as "egotistical" while female faculty were rated more
"sensitive and altruistic." Male students were least likely to support a
search for a female dean, hiring more female faculty members, or accepting
an incoming class in which the majority were women.