Abstract
BackgroundFemale surgeons are highly underrepresented in Asian countries, where prescriptive gender norms are widespread and more deeply embedded in societies. Materials and methodsA nationwide structured questionnaire was completed by 1741 Singaporean third- and fifth-year medical students after the completion of an 8-week general surgery rotation, during 2015-2017. Results were analyzed using mixed-effects hierarchical models which took into account clustering of survey responses under the teaching hospitals which students were posted to and medical students’ year of study. ResultsFemale medical students had a poorer perception of general surgery than male students (3.22 ± 0.91 versus 3.41 ± 0.89; P < 0.0001) before the clerkship. However, the clerkship improved female students' opinion to a greater extent than male students (+0.84 ± 1.06 versus +0.59 ± 1.03; P < 0.0001), resulting in female and male students having comparable attitudes toward surgery after the clerkship (4.06 ± 0.79 versus 4.00 ± 0.87; P = 0.2435). A total of 40.4% of female students responded that they were inspired to pursue a surgical career after the clerkship, and we identified 13 pedagogical traits of faculty and resident mentors which were associated with female students’ career aspirations. Female students were more likely to consider intellectual challenges arising from cases (ratio: 1.045 [95% confidence interval 1.004-1.088, P = 0.0292]) and the presence of role models (ratio: 1.068 [95% confidence interval: 1.020-1.118, P = 0.0048]) as “pull” factors compared with their male contemporaries, but were deterred from a surgical career to a greater extent by eight “push” factors. ConclusionsA surgical clerkship itself could be regarded as an effective intervention for improving female medical students’ enthusiasm for surgery, which may help to address the “pipeline problem” of few female students applying for surgical training after medical school. A greater emphasis on “pull factors” and pedagogical qualities of mentors could be used to improve the clerkship experience, to attract more female students to surgery.
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