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Women doctors face glass ceiling at academic pinnacle of profession

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Published Date: 25 September 2007
FEMALE doctors in the UK face a glass ceiling in the clinical academic sector, even though more are entering the medical profession, a study shows.
Research published in the Journal of Medical Education suggests that women suffer discrimination and are under- represented, particularly at the most senior levels.

It looked at clinical academics - researchers who are also medical professionals - at all 32 medical schools in the UK during 2004 and 2005.

The study showed women made up a relatively small percentage of the clinical academic workforce, at just 21 per cent, even though more women than men are entering medicine and they now form over 60 per cent of the medical student body.

Only one in ten medical clinical professors was found to be female. During 2004-5 a total of 207 men became professors - but only six women.

The researchers from Imperial College London, the University of Bristol and the Medical Schools Council say some workforce practices may be detrimental to women's clinical academic careers.



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1

Maisie from Morningside,

Edinburgh 25/09/2007 03:18:53

How many of the men are taking 10 years off to have babies?
See????

2

Guga II,

Rockall 25/09/2007 06:30:27

Well done Maisie. I finally agree with something you've said.

3

Robert,

Kirriemuir 25/09/2007 17:22:48

Okay, shall we suggest the profession follows other institutes since the introduction of sex discrimatory legislation and advance females for reasons other than professional competence especially in the lecturing, supervisory, or management feilds? Let us say the ability to bear children be a consideration to advancement or, alternatively, give men say a 10 year sabatical to compensate for the Cinderella feeling of their colleagues? Surely the purposes of doctoring is to doctor and advancement into other spheres, while an integrate part of an organisation, is incidental to the professional and primary task involved and, if so, where is the cause to bemoan what some consider unluck? One is reminded of one of Shakespeare's sentiments when he said, "The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars but in ourselves that we are underlings"!

4

Horrible Cankers esq,

The Cyber Shebeen 25/09/2007 21:59:33

This is of course, assuming all of our female doctors have children.


 

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