Abstract

PurposeThis study sought to assess gender differences among physician faculty in medical biochemistry and genetics programs in North America. It compared the distribution of academic and leadership ranks, years of active research, number of citations and publications, and Hirsch-index (h-index) by gender. Variable associations with the h-index were assessed.MethodThis was a cross-sectional retrospective study for which data was collected from June 2019 to October 2019 on academic and administrative physician faculty members for medical biochemistry and genetics programs. The website of Fellowship and Residency Electronic Interactive Database, Canadian Resident Matching Service website, and the medical biochemistry profile from the Canadian Medical Association to identify relevant programs and SCOPUS was used to gather faculty data.ResultsThe analyses included 147 faculty members. More male faculty held higher academic rank positions and first-in-command leadership positions than female faculty. Men had more median years of active research, citation numbers, publication numbers, and h-index than women across all academic ranks. Upon performing multivariable linear regression, female faculty showed 0.39 times the odds of having a higher h-index than male faculty, keeping all other variables constant (p<0.01). ConclusionsIn our study, it was shown that male physician faculty surveyed had higher performance than female faculty in academic rank and research productivity. Certain barriers may be contributing factors, including lack of mentorship or flexible institutional policies, women choosing clinical educator tracks, or gender bias. Considering the low retention rates of women in academic research, there is a need to address barriers in order to achieve gender parity.

Highlights

  • Over the past decades, efforts have been directed towards the advancement of women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)

  • It was shown that male physician faculty surveyed had higher performance than female faculty in academic rank and research productivity

  • We used the search term "medical biochemical genetics" on the Website of Fellowship and Residency Electronic Interactive Database (FREIDA) online. This provided us with a list of 16 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) - accredited Medical Biochemistry and Genetics programs of the American Medical Association (AMA)

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Summary

Introduction

Efforts have been directed towards the advancement of women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). While some STEM academic disciplines like mathematics and statistics still lag behind in terms of equal gender representation, academic disciplines like the life sciences have shown encouraging results. Statistics on earned degrees in 2012 showed that women were awarded 59% of bachelor’s degrees in biological/biomedical sciences and 54% of doctorate degrees in this discipline [1]. Despite the increasing representation in undergraduate and doctoral programs, gender disparities continue to persist in academic disciplines [2, 3]. While the factors leading to these disparities are still under debate, one claim is that differences

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