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Sexual harassment, bullying, and gender bias are still very real occupational hazards for ob.gyn. trainees and practitioners alike — even in this female-dominated field, a systematic evidence review found.

Published in JAMA Network Open, by Ankita Gupta, MD, MPH, a urogynecology and reconstructive pelvic surgery specialist at the University of Louisville in Kentucky, and colleagues, the analysis found rates as high as 71% for sexual harassment, coercion, or unwanted advances. It also noted high rates of bullying, gender bias, and microaggressions. “We were struck by the continued high rates of harassment,” Dr. Gupta said in an interview. “Much of the literature within academic medicine has suggested the unequal distribution of women among medical specialties is the cause of sexual and gender harassment, but despite ob.gyns. being overwhelmingly female, we found that gender bias continues to occur at alarmingly high rates.”

Furthermore, among studies where this was reported, almost 25% of respondents had experienced sexual coercion. Not unexpectedly, this mistreatment often went unreported to institutional leadership out of fear of retaliation.

“We were also surprised to find a high rate of 51% for sexual harassment among male respondents as well, suggesting that both gender and power dynamics play a role in harassment,” Dr. Gupta said.

The primary perpetrators of unwanted behaviors were other doctors, overwhelmingly attending physicians, although residents and fellows were also identified as perpetrators, especially when harassment was reported by medical students, she added. “This once again points to the underreported abuse of professional power.” Women were rarely the perpetrators — just 10% — although they were the perpetrators in 57.7% of cases when the victim was male.

“Another interesting aspect of this is gender bias and microaggressions in the operating room,” she continued. While female surgeons often experience bias coming from OR staff, the review found that 94.4% of female ob.gyns. had been mistaken for non-physicians, 88.9% had pre-apologized for asking for something from a surgical technician or nurse, and 83.3% needed to make such requests multiple times. “These instances demonstrate gender bias in both male and female operating room staff toward female ob.gyns.”

Undermining and bullying behaviors are common in surgical specialties, Dr. Gupta explained, and the tantrums, swearing, and humiliation of trainees may be considered as much a rite of passage as the long hours. “As a trainee, you are taught to ignore such behavior as reporting it comes with fear of repercussions.”

This review bore this out, with only 8%-12% of respondents across studies reporting harassment and then predominantly to another trainee. “Sexual harassment and microaggressions can further lead to loss of career opportunities and burnout and I have come across many ob.gyns. who have chosen alternate paths owing to negative experiences,” Dr. Gupta said.

The Analysis

A joint effort by the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons and the and Society of Gynecologic Oncology, the analysis looked at existing literature from inception through June 2023.

A total of 10 eligible studies with 5852 participants addressed prevalence and 12 eligible studies in 2906 participants addressed interventions. Among the findings across different studies:

  • Sexual harassment was noted by 250 of 907 physicians (27.6%) and 181 of 255 female gynecologic oncologists (70.9%).
  • Workplace discrimination ranged from 142 of 249 female gynecologic oncologists (57.0%) to 354 of 527 female gynecologic oncologists (67.2%); among male gynecologic oncologists 138 of 358 (38.5%) reported discrimination.
  • Bullying was reported by 131 of 248 female gynecologic oncologists (52.8%).
  • Ob.gyn. trainees commonly experienced sexual harassment: 253 of 366 respondents (69.1%); this included gender harassment, unwanted sexual attention, and sexual coercion.
  • Mistreatment of medical students during ob.gyn. rotation was indicated by 168 of 668 (25.1%).
  • Perpetrators of harassment included physicians (30.1%), other trainees (13.1%), and OR staff (7.7%).

These findings are consistent with those of other recent investigations. A systematic review from 2022 found that 25% of ob.gyn., 32% of general surgery, and 21% of medical interns and students reported bullying .

In another 2022 review, in which ob.gyn. program directors were mainly women and department chairs mainly men, the prevalence of sexual harassment did not differ based on the gender of program directors and chairs.

A study from 2021 reported that 27% of academic surgical trainees, including ob.gyns., reported sexual harassment.

Going back to 2004, a study across multiple medical specialties found that ob.gyn. was second only to general surgery as the specialty associated with the highest rates of sexual harassment.

Despite institutional anti-discrimination policies, real-life interventions seem ineffective. “Disappointingly, we found that most interventions to address harassment had not been appropriately evaluated and did not show a decrease in sexual harassment,” Dr. Gupta said. “Interventions that were successful in reducing mistreatment of trainees required institutional buy-in at multiple levels, including leadership, management, and administration,” she said.

Multi-pronged strategies might include providing tools to educate healthcare staff about harassment and empowering bystanders to intervene when encountering such situations. “Further, independent offices where all complaints are evaluated by an intermediary third party and requiring professionalism to be a criterion for promotion criterion can be useful strategies,” she said.

She noted that residents may model harassing behavior perpetrated by senior attending physicians, thereby creating a cycle of mistreatment. “Equipping clinicians to be better surgical educators, providing clinical support, and modeling positive behavior may help disrupt the culture of harassment.” While the best solutions may be unclear, it is clear that much work remains to be done before the ob.gyn. working environment catches up to official institutional anti-discrimination policies.

This study was supported by the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons. Dr. Gupta disclosed no competing interests. Several coauthors disclosed relationships with multiple pharmaceutical or biomedical companies.

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Sexual harassment, bullying, and gender bias are still very real occupational hazards for ob.gyn. trainees and practitioners alike — even in this female-dominated field, a systematic evidence review found.

Published in JAMA Network Open, by Ankita Gupta, MD, MPH, a urogynecology and reconstructive pelvic surgery specialist at the University of Louisville in Kentucky, and colleagues, the analysis found rates as high as 71% for sexual harassment, coercion, or unwanted advances. It also noted high rates of bullying, gender bias, and microaggressions. “We were struck by the continued high rates of harassment,” Dr. Gupta said in an interview. “Much of the literature within academic medicine has suggested the unequal distribution of women among medical specialties is the cause of sexual and gender harassment, but despite ob.gyns. being overwhelmingly female, we found that gender bias continues to occur at alarmingly high rates.”

Furthermore, among studies where this was reported, almost 25% of respondents had experienced sexual coercion. Not unexpectedly, this mistreatment often went unreported to institutional leadership out of fear of retaliation.

“We were also surprised to find a high rate of 51% for sexual harassment among male respondents as well, suggesting that both gender and power dynamics play a role in harassment,” Dr. Gupta said.

The primary perpetrators of unwanted behaviors were other doctors, overwhelmingly attending physicians, although residents and fellows were also identified as perpetrators, especially when harassment was reported by medical students, she added. “This once again points to the underreported abuse of professional power.” Women were rarely the perpetrators — just 10% — although they were the perpetrators in 57.7% of cases when the victim was male.

“Another interesting aspect of this is gender bias and microaggressions in the operating room,” she continued. While female surgeons often experience bias coming from OR staff, the review found that 94.4% of female ob.gyns. had been mistaken for non-physicians, 88.9% had pre-apologized for asking for something from a surgical technician or nurse, and 83.3% needed to make such requests multiple times. “These instances demonstrate gender bias in both male and female operating room staff toward female ob.gyns.”

Undermining and bullying behaviors are common in surgical specialties, Dr. Gupta explained, and the tantrums, swearing, and humiliation of trainees may be considered as much a rite of passage as the long hours. “As a trainee, you are taught to ignore such behavior as reporting it comes with fear of repercussions.”

This review bore this out, with only 8%-12% of respondents across studies reporting harassment and then predominantly to another trainee. “Sexual harassment and microaggressions can further lead to loss of career opportunities and burnout and I have come across many ob.gyns. who have chosen alternate paths owing to negative experiences,” Dr. Gupta said.

The Analysis

A joint effort by the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons and the and Society of Gynecologic Oncology, the analysis looked at existing literature from inception through June 2023.

A total of 10 eligible studies with 5852 participants addressed prevalence and 12 eligible studies in 2906 participants addressed interventions. Among the findings across different studies:

  • Sexual harassment was noted by 250 of 907 physicians (27.6%) and 181 of 255 female gynecologic oncologists (70.9%).
  • Workplace discrimination ranged from 142 of 249 female gynecologic oncologists (57.0%) to 354 of 527 female gynecologic oncologists (67.2%); among male gynecologic oncologists 138 of 358 (38.5%) reported discrimination.
  • Bullying was reported by 131 of 248 female gynecologic oncologists (52.8%).
  • Ob.gyn. trainees commonly experienced sexual harassment: 253 of 366 respondents (69.1%); this included gender harassment, unwanted sexual attention, and sexual coercion.
  • Mistreatment of medical students during ob.gyn. rotation was indicated by 168 of 668 (25.1%).
  • Perpetrators of harassment included physicians (30.1%), other trainees (13.1%), and OR staff (7.7%).

These findings are consistent with those of other recent investigations. A systematic review from 2022 found that 25% of ob.gyn., 32% of general surgery, and 21% of medical interns and students reported bullying .

In another 2022 review, in which ob.gyn. program directors were mainly women and department chairs mainly men, the prevalence of sexual harassment did not differ based on the gender of program directors and chairs.

A study from 2021 reported that 27% of academic surgical trainees, including ob.gyns., reported sexual harassment.

Going back to 2004, a study across multiple medical specialties found that ob.gyn. was second only to general surgery as the specialty associated with the highest rates of sexual harassment.

Despite institutional anti-discrimination policies, real-life interventions seem ineffective. “Disappointingly, we found that most interventions to address harassment had not been appropriately evaluated and did not show a decrease in sexual harassment,” Dr. Gupta said. “Interventions that were successful in reducing mistreatment of trainees required institutional buy-in at multiple levels, including leadership, management, and administration,” she said.

Multi-pronged strategies might include providing tools to educate healthcare staff about harassment and empowering bystanders to intervene when encountering such situations. “Further, independent offices where all complaints are evaluated by an intermediary third party and requiring professionalism to be a criterion for promotion criterion can be useful strategies,” she said.

She noted that residents may model harassing behavior perpetrated by senior attending physicians, thereby creating a cycle of mistreatment. “Equipping clinicians to be better surgical educators, providing clinical support, and modeling positive behavior may help disrupt the culture of harassment.” While the best solutions may be unclear, it is clear that much work remains to be done before the ob.gyn. working environment catches up to official institutional anti-discrimination policies.

This study was supported by the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons. Dr. Gupta disclosed no competing interests. Several coauthors disclosed relationships with multiple pharmaceutical or biomedical companies.

Sexual harassment, bullying, and gender bias are still very real occupational hazards for ob.gyn. trainees and practitioners alike — even in this female-dominated field, a systematic evidence review found.

Published in JAMA Network Open, by Ankita Gupta, MD, MPH, a urogynecology and reconstructive pelvic surgery specialist at the University of Louisville in Kentucky, and colleagues, the analysis found rates as high as 71% for sexual harassment, coercion, or unwanted advances. It also noted high rates of bullying, gender bias, and microaggressions. “We were struck by the continued high rates of harassment,” Dr. Gupta said in an interview. “Much of the literature within academic medicine has suggested the unequal distribution of women among medical specialties is the cause of sexual and gender harassment, but despite ob.gyns. being overwhelmingly female, we found that gender bias continues to occur at alarmingly high rates.”

Furthermore, among studies where this was reported, almost 25% of respondents had experienced sexual coercion. Not unexpectedly, this mistreatment often went unreported to institutional leadership out of fear of retaliation.

“We were also surprised to find a high rate of 51% for sexual harassment among male respondents as well, suggesting that both gender and power dynamics play a role in harassment,” Dr. Gupta said.

The primary perpetrators of unwanted behaviors were other doctors, overwhelmingly attending physicians, although residents and fellows were also identified as perpetrators, especially when harassment was reported by medical students, she added. “This once again points to the underreported abuse of professional power.” Women were rarely the perpetrators — just 10% — although they were the perpetrators in 57.7% of cases when the victim was male.

“Another interesting aspect of this is gender bias and microaggressions in the operating room,” she continued. While female surgeons often experience bias coming from OR staff, the review found that 94.4% of female ob.gyns. had been mistaken for non-physicians, 88.9% had pre-apologized for asking for something from a surgical technician or nurse, and 83.3% needed to make such requests multiple times. “These instances demonstrate gender bias in both male and female operating room staff toward female ob.gyns.”

Undermining and bullying behaviors are common in surgical specialties, Dr. Gupta explained, and the tantrums, swearing, and humiliation of trainees may be considered as much a rite of passage as the long hours. “As a trainee, you are taught to ignore such behavior as reporting it comes with fear of repercussions.”

This review bore this out, with only 8%-12% of respondents across studies reporting harassment and then predominantly to another trainee. “Sexual harassment and microaggressions can further lead to loss of career opportunities and burnout and I have come across many ob.gyns. who have chosen alternate paths owing to negative experiences,” Dr. Gupta said.

The Analysis

A joint effort by the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons and the and Society of Gynecologic Oncology, the analysis looked at existing literature from inception through June 2023.

A total of 10 eligible studies with 5852 participants addressed prevalence and 12 eligible studies in 2906 participants addressed interventions. Among the findings across different studies:

  • Sexual harassment was noted by 250 of 907 physicians (27.6%) and 181 of 255 female gynecologic oncologists (70.9%).
  • Workplace discrimination ranged from 142 of 249 female gynecologic oncologists (57.0%) to 354 of 527 female gynecologic oncologists (67.2%); among male gynecologic oncologists 138 of 358 (38.5%) reported discrimination.
  • Bullying was reported by 131 of 248 female gynecologic oncologists (52.8%).
  • Ob.gyn. trainees commonly experienced sexual harassment: 253 of 366 respondents (69.1%); this included gender harassment, unwanted sexual attention, and sexual coercion.
  • Mistreatment of medical students during ob.gyn. rotation was indicated by 168 of 668 (25.1%).
  • Perpetrators of harassment included physicians (30.1%), other trainees (13.1%), and OR staff (7.7%).

These findings are consistent with those of other recent investigations. A systematic review from 2022 found that 25% of ob.gyn., 32% of general surgery, and 21% of medical interns and students reported bullying .

In another 2022 review, in which ob.gyn. program directors were mainly women and department chairs mainly men, the prevalence of sexual harassment did not differ based on the gender of program directors and chairs.

A study from 2021 reported that 27% of academic surgical trainees, including ob.gyns., reported sexual harassment.

Going back to 2004, a study across multiple medical specialties found that ob.gyn. was second only to general surgery as the specialty associated with the highest rates of sexual harassment.

Despite institutional anti-discrimination policies, real-life interventions seem ineffective. “Disappointingly, we found that most interventions to address harassment had not been appropriately evaluated and did not show a decrease in sexual harassment,” Dr. Gupta said. “Interventions that were successful in reducing mistreatment of trainees required institutional buy-in at multiple levels, including leadership, management, and administration,” she said.

Multi-pronged strategies might include providing tools to educate healthcare staff about harassment and empowering bystanders to intervene when encountering such situations. “Further, independent offices where all complaints are evaluated by an intermediary third party and requiring professionalism to be a criterion for promotion criterion can be useful strategies,” she said.

She noted that residents may model harassing behavior perpetrated by senior attending physicians, thereby creating a cycle of mistreatment. “Equipping clinicians to be better surgical educators, providing clinical support, and modeling positive behavior may help disrupt the culture of harassment.” While the best solutions may be unclear, it is clear that much work remains to be done before the ob.gyn. working environment catches up to official institutional anti-discrimination policies.

This study was supported by the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons. Dr. Gupta disclosed no competing interests. Several coauthors disclosed relationships with multiple pharmaceutical or biomedical companies.

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It also noted high rates of bullying, gender bias, and microaggressions. “We were struck by the continued high rates of harassment,” Dr. Gupta said in an interview. “Much of the literature within academic medicine has suggested the unequal distribution of women among medical specialties is the cause of sexual and gender harassment, but despite ob.gyns. being overwhelmingly female, we found that gender bias continues to occur at alarmingly high rates.”<br/><br/>Furthermore, among studies where this was reported, almost 25% of respondents had experienced sexual coercion. Not unexpectedly, this mistreatment often went unreported to institutional leadership out of fear of retaliation. <br/><br/>“We were also surprised to find a high rate of 51% for sexual harassment among male respondents as well, suggesting that both gender and power dynamics play a role in harassment,” Dr. Gupta said.<br/><br/>The primary perpetrators of unwanted behaviors were other doctors, overwhelmingly attending physicians, although residents and fellows were also identified as perpetrators, especially when harassment was reported by medical students, she added. “This once again points to the underreported abuse of professional power.” Women were rarely the perpetrators — just 10% — although they were the perpetrators in 57.7% of cases when the victim was male. <br/><br/>“Another interesting aspect of this is gender bias and microaggressions in the operating room,” she continued. While female surgeons often experience bias coming from OR staff, the review found that 94.4% of female ob.gyns. had been mistaken for non-physicians, 88.9% had pre-apologized for asking for something from a surgical technician or nurse, and 83.3% needed to make such requests multiple times. “These instances demonstrate gender bias in both male and female operating room staff toward female ob.gyns.” <br/><br/>Undermining and bullying behaviors are common in surgical specialties, Dr. Gupta explained, and the tantrums, swearing, and humiliation of trainees may be considered as much a rite of passage as the long hours. “As a trainee, you are taught to ignore such behavior as reporting it comes with fear of repercussions.” <br/><br/>This review bore this out, with only 8%-12% of respondents across studies reporting harassment and then predominantly to another trainee. “Sexual harassment and microaggressions can further lead to loss of career opportunities and burnout and I have come across many ob.gyns. who have chosen alternate paths owing to negative experiences,” Dr. Gupta said.</p> <h2>The Analysis</h2> <p>A joint effort by the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons and the and Society of Gynecologic Oncology, the analysis looked at existing literature from inception through June 2023.</p> <p>A total of 10 eligible studies with 5852 participants addressed prevalence and 12 eligible studies in 2906 participants addressed interventions. Among the findings across different studies:</p> <ul class="body"> <li>Sexual harassment was noted by 250 of 907 physicians (27.6%) and 181 of 255 female gynecologic oncologists (70.9%). </li> <li>Workplace discrimination ranged from 142 of 249 female gynecologic oncologists (57.0%) to 354 of 527 female gynecologic oncologists (67.2%); among male gynecologic oncologists 138 of 358 (38.5%) reported discrimination.</li> <li>Bullying was reported by 131 of 248 female gynecologic oncologists (52.8%).</li> <li>Ob.gyn. trainees commonly experienced sexual harassment: 253 of 366 respondents (69.1%); this included gender harassment, unwanted sexual attention, and sexual coercion. </li> <li>Mistreatment of medical students during ob.gyn. rotation was indicated by 168 of 668 (25.1%). </li> <li>Perpetrators of harassment included physicians (30.1%), other trainees (13.1%), and OR staff (7.7%). </li> </ul> <p>These findings are consistent with those of other recent investigations. A systematic <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1007/s00268-021-06432-6">review</a></span> from 2022 found that 25% of ob.gyn., 32% of general surgery, and 21% of medical interns and students reported bullying .</p> <p>In <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S193172042200068X?via%3Dihub">another 2022 review</a></span>, in which ob.gyn. program directors were mainly women and department chairs mainly men, the prevalence of sexual harassment did not differ based on the gender of program directors and chairs.<br/><br/>A <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/11/7/e043256">study from 2021</a></span> reported that 27% of academic surgical trainees, including ob.gyns., reported sexual harassment.<br/><br/>Going back to 2004, <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1363459304038799">a study</a></span> across multiple medical specialties found that ob.gyn. was second only to general surgery as the specialty associated with the highest rates of sexual harassment.<br/><br/>Despite institutional anti-discrimination policies, real-life interventions seem ineffective. “Disappointingly, we found that most interventions to address harassment had not been appropriately evaluated and did not show a decrease in sexual harassment,” Dr. Gupta said. “Interventions that were successful in reducing mistreatment of trainees required institutional buy-in at multiple levels, including leadership, management, and administration,” she said.<br/><br/>Multi-pronged strategies might include providing tools to educate healthcare staff about harassment and empowering bystanders to intervene when encountering such situations. “Further, independent offices where all complaints are evaluated by an intermediary third party and requiring professionalism to be a criterion for promotion criterion can be useful strategies,” she said. <br/><br/>She noted that residents may model harassing behavior perpetrated by senior attending physicians, thereby creating a cycle of mistreatment. “Equipping clinicians to be better surgical educators, providing clinical support, and modeling positive behavior may help disrupt the culture of harassment.” While the best solutions may be unclear, it is clear that much work remains to be done before the ob.gyn. working environment catches up to official institutional anti-discrimination policies.<br/><br/>This study was supported by the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons. Dr. Gupta disclosed no competing interests. Several coauthors disclosed relationships with multiple pharmaceutical or biomedical companies. </p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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