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- Ya-Wen Chen, Maggie L Westfal, David C Chang, and Cassandra M Kelleher.
- Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital/ Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
- Ann. Surg. 2021 Feb 1; 273 (2): 197-201.
ObjectiveTo compare the complexity of operations performed by female versus male surgeons.BackgroundPrior literature has suggested that female surgeons are relatively underemployed when compared to male surgeons, with regards to operative case volume and specialization.MethodsOperative case records from a large academic medical center from 1997 to 2018 were evaluated. The primary end point was work relative value unit (wRVU) for each case with a secondary end point of total wRVU per month for each surgeon. Multivariate linear analysis was performed, adjusting for surgeon race, calendar year, seniority, and clinical subspecialty.ResultsA total of 551,047 records were analyzed, from 131 surgeons and 13,666 surgeon-months. Among them, 104,424 (19.0%) of cases were performed by female surgeons, who make up 20.6% (n = 27) of the surgeon population, and 2879 (21.1%) of the surgeon months. On adjusted analysis, male surgeons earned an additional 1.65 wRVU per case, compared to female surgeons (95% confidence interval 1.57-1.74). Subset analyses found that sex disparity increased with surgeon seniority, and did not improve over the 20-year study period.ConclusionsFemale surgeons perform less complex cases than their male peers, even after accounting for subspecialty and seniority. These sex differences are not due to availability from competing professional or familial obligations. Future work should focus on determining the cause and mitigating this underemployment of female surgeons.Copyright © 2020 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
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