Gender Differences in Attending Physicians' Feedback to Residents: A Qualitative Analysis

Adult Male Faculty, Medical 4. Education Internship and Residency Observation 02 engineering and technology Feedback Sex Factors 5. Gender equality Emergency Medicine 0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering Humans Female Clinical Competence Longitudinal Studies 10. No inequality Qualitative Research
DOI: 10.4300/jgme-d-17-00126.1 Publication Date: 2017-08-22T22:11:19Z
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACTBackground Prior research has shown a gender gap in the evaluations of emergency medicine (EM) residents' competency on the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) milestones, yet the practical implications of this are not fully understood.Objective To better understand the gender gap in evaluations, we examined qualitative differences in the feedback that male and female residents received from attending physicians.Methods This study used a longitudinal qualitative content analysis of narrative comments by attending physicians during real-time direct observation milestone evaluations of residents. Comments were collected over 2 years from 1 ACGME-accredited EM training program.Results In total, 1317 direct observation evaluations with comments from 67 faculty members were collected for 47 postgraduate year 3 EM residents. Analysis of the comments revealed that the ideal EM resident possesses many stereotypically masculine traits. Additionally, examination of a subset of the residents (those with 15 or more comments, n = 35) showed that when male residents struggled, they received consistent feedback from different attending physicians regarding aspects of their performance that needed work. In contrast, when female residents struggled, they received discordant feedback from different attending physicians, particularly regarding issues of autonomy and assertiveness.Conclusions Our study revealed qualitative differences in the kind of feedback that male and female EM residents received from attending physicians. The findings suggest that attending physicians should endeavor to provide male and female residents with consistent feedback and guard against gender bias in their perceptions of residents' capabilities.
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