• CMAJ · Mar 2022

    Diversity among health care leaders in Canada: a cross-sectional study of perceived gender and race.

    • Anjali Sergeant, Sudipta Saha, Anushka Lalwani, Anand Sergeant, Avery McNair, Elias Larrazabal, Kelsey Yang, Orly Bogler, Arti Dhoot, Dan Werb, Nazlee Maghsoudi, Lisa Richardson, Gillian Hawker, Arjumand Siddiqi, Amol Verma, and Fahad Razak.
    • Faculty of Health Sciences (Anjali Sergeant), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.; Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute (Saha, Lalwani, Verma, Razak), St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ont.; Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry (Anand Sergeant), Western University, London, Ont.; School of Population and Public Health (McNair), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; Arts and Science Program (Larrazabal), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.; Temerty Faculty of Medicine (Yang, Bogler, Dhoot, Richardson, Verma, Razak), University of Toronto; Centre on Drug Policy Evaluation (Werb), Unity Health Toronto, Toronto, Ont.; Division of Infectious Diseases and Public Health (Werb), University of San Diego, La Jolla, Calif.; Centre on Drug Policy Evaluation (Maghsoudi), Unity Health Toronto; Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation (Maghsoudi), University of Toronto; Department of Medicine (Richardson, Hawker), University of Toronto; Dalla Lana School of Public Health (Siddiqi), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont.
    • CMAJ. 2022 Mar 14; 194 (10): E371-E377.

    BackgroundDiverse health care leadership teams may improve health care experiences and outcomes for patients. We sought to explore the race and gender of hospital and health ministry executives in Canada and compare their diversity with that of the populations they serve.MethodsThis cross-sectional study included leaders of Canada's largest hospitals and all provincial and territorial health ministries. We included individuals listed on institutional websites as part of the leadership team if a name and photo were available. Six reviewers coded and analyzed the perceived race and gender of leaders, in duplicate. We compared the proportion of racialized health care leaders with the race demographics of the general population from the 2016 Canadian Census.ResultsWe included 3056 leaders from 135 institutions, with reviewer concordance on gender for 3022 leaders and on race for 2946 leaders. Reviewers perceived 37 (47.4%) of 78 health ministry leaders as women, and fewer than 5 (< 7%) of 80 as racialized. In Alberta, Saskatchewan, Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia, provinces with a centralized hospital executive team, reviewers coded 36 (50.0%) of 72 leaders as women and 5 (7.1%) of 70 as racialized. In British Columbia, New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador, provinces with hospital leadership by region, reviewers perceived 120 (56.1%) of 214 leaders as women and 24 (11.5%) of 209 as racialized. In Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec, where leadership teams exist at each hospital, reviewers perceived 1326 (49.9%) of 2658 leaders as women and 243 (9.2%) of 2633 as racialized. We calculated the representation gap between racialized executives and the racialized population as 14.5% for British Columbia, 27.5% for Manitoba, 20.7% for Ontario, 12.4% for Quebec, 7.6% for New Brunswick, 7.3% for Prince Edward Island and 11.6% for Newfoundland and Labrador.InterpretationIn a study of more than 3000 health care leaders in Canada, gender parity was present, but racialized executives were substantially under-represented. This work should prompt health care institutions to increase racial diversity in leadership.© 2022 CMA Impact Inc. or its licensors.

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