• Southern medical journal · Oct 2022

    Preparing Residents to Respond to Incidences of Gender Discrimination and Sexual Harassment: An Interactive Workshop.

    • Amy H Farkas, Cecilia Scholcoff, Morgan Lamberg, Harini Shah, Kathlyn Fletcher, and Emmanuelle Yecies.
    • From the Division of General Internal Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Department of Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and the VA Palo Alto Healthcare System, Palo Alto, California.
    • South. Med. J. 2022 Oct 1; 115 (10): 740-744.

    ObjectivesGender discrimination and sexual harassment are common in academic medicine. There are limited data on how to prepare medical trainees to respond to these incidents. The objective of this work was to understand the experience of residents with sexual harassment and to evaluate the impact of a low-cost educational intervention to better prepare residents to respond to incidents of gender discrimination and sexual harassment.MethodsWe adapted a national faculty development workshop to be given to Internal Medicine residents. The workshop had three components: an introduction to the problem of sexual harassment, cases for guided practice, and review of Title IX. The workshop was presented to residents during protected academic time and assessed with pre-/post- surveys.ResultsThe majority (65, 73.0%) of residents reported at least one incident of gender discrimination or sexual harassment in the prior 6 months; 62 (69.7%) residents reported an incident of gender harassment, 26 (29.6%) reported unwanted sexual attention, and 2 (2.3%) reported an incident of sexual coercion. The majority of residents (53, 62.4%) reported previous training, but only 28 (32.6%) felt well trained. Compared with before the workshop, residents reported more comfort (mean 2.88 vs 3.39, P = 0.0304) with and confidence (mean 3.47 vs 3.88, P = 0.0284) in responding to incidents of harassment. After the workshop, residents were more likely to use active responses, including express discomfort (15.0% vs 51.0%), express a preference (15.0% vs 53.1%), and debrief (13.3% vs 63.3%) and less likely to ignore the incident (56.7% vs 34.7%).ConclusionsThis workshop offers one potential solution by better preparing residents to actively respond to incidents of gender discrimination and sexual harassment.

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