Abstract

Within the United States (US) medical system, diversity in healthcare is a growing concern although studies have shown improved patient outcomes when healthcare teams are diverse. We were interested in cardiology-related fellowships from internal medicine and surgical specialties to understand how females, osteopaths (DOs), and non-US graduates were represented compared to males, allopathic medical doctors (MD), and US-graduated peers. We obtained data about accredited cardiology fellowship programs from the Fellowship and Residency Electronic Interactive Database Access System (FRIEDA™) for 2022-2023 and determined statistical significance for male/female, DO/MD, and US/non-US graduate status by reviewing program sites. Statistical analysis utilized SAS Studio 3.8, version 9.4 (SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC)and Wilson score for confidence intervals. Cardiology-related fellowships from internal medicine and surgery backgrounds showed generalized marked disparities (p<0.001) with only a couple of exceptions. For Interventional Cardiology, non-US graduates were well represented (p=0.3775), and for Heart Failure & Transplant Cardiology, females were represented equally (p=0.0863). For all other specialties and values, females, DOs, and non-US graduates were underrepresented. Despite conversations about diversity, underrepresentation persists. We encourage further steps to address barriers preventing underrepresented groups from advancing to their full potential in leadership and careers. Increasing diversity promotes competence, empathy, communication, and inclusive patient care.

Full Text
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