Abstract
Despite more women being employed in medicine, research still “lags behind” in gender equality, a survey has found. The Royal College of Physicians surveyed around 2000 UK doctors and found that men and women were equally likely to be employed in a research role.1 However, if not formally employed in a research role, women were less likely than men to engage in research in addition to their regular clinical duties, with only 29% doing so compared with 43% of men. It …
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