Research report
Women in hospital medicine in the United Kingdom: glass ceiling,
preference, prejudice or cohort effect?
I C McManus, K A Sproston
Centre for Health
Informatics and Multiprofessional Education (CHIME), Royal Free and
University College London Medical School, Archway Campus, Highgate
Hill, London N19 3UA
Correspondence to: Professor I C McManus.
Accepted for publication 25 April 1999
OBJECTIVE
To assess
from official statistics whether there is evidence that the careers of
women doctors in hospitals do not progress in the same way as those of men.
DESIGN
The proportions
of female hospital doctors overall (1963-96), and in the specialties
of medicine, surgery, obstetrics and gynaecology, pathology,
radiology/radiotherapy, anaesthetics and psychiatry (1974-1996) were
examined. Additionally data were examined on career preferences and
intentions from pre-registration house officers, final year medical
students, and medical school applicants (1966-1991).
ANALYSIS
Data were
analysed according to cohort of entry to medical school to assess the
extent of disproportionate promotion.
RESULTS
The proportion
of women in hospital career posts was largely explained by the rapidly
increasing proportion of women entering medical school during the past
three decades. In general there was little evidence for
disproportionate promotion of women in hospital careers, although in
surgery, hospital medicine and obstetrics and gynaecology, fewer women
seemed to progress beyond the SHO grade, and in anaesthetics there were
deficits of women at each career stage. Analyses of career preferences
and intentions suggest that disproportionate promotion cannot readily
be explained as differential choice by women.
CONCLUSIONS
Although
there is no evidence as such of a "glass ceiling" for women doctors
in hospital careers, and the current paucity of women consultants
primarily reflects historical trends in the numbers of women entering
medical school, there is evidence in some cases of disproportionate
promotion that is best interpreted as direct or indirect discrimination.
© 2000 by Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
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