PA Rochon, F Davidoff, W Levinson - Academic Medicine, 2016 - journals.lww.com
Over the past 25 years, the number of women graduating from medical schools in the United States and Canada has increased dramatically to the point where roughly equal numbers of …
Women continue to face unique barriers in the biomedical workforce that affect their advancement and retention in this field. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) formed the …
L Nonnemaker - New England Journal of Medicine, 2000 - Mass Medical Soc
Background I conducted a study to determine whether women who graduate from medical schools are more or less likely than their male counterparts to pursue full-time careers in …
Purpose A scarcity of women in leadership positions in academic medicine has persisted despite their increasing numbers in medical training. To understand the barriers confronting …
Background In 2000, a landmark study showed that women who graduated from US medical schools from 1979 through 1997 were less likely than their male counterparts to be …
While women have been well represented in medical school and biomedical doctoral degree programs, they do not comprise half of academic medicine faculty positions …
GE Thibault - academic medicine, 2016 - journals.lww.com
More than a decade ago, women achieved parity with men in the number of matriculants to medical school, nearly one-third of the faculty of medical schools were women, and there …
MM Joseph, AM Ahasic, J Clark, K Templeton - Pediatrics, 2021 - publications.aap.org
Women in medicine have made progress since Elizabeth Blackwell: the first women to receive her medical degree in the United States in 1849. Yet although women currently …
J Bickel - Western Journal of Medicine, 1995 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
T he distribution of women physicians among specialties remains uneven (Table 1). For example, 60% of the residents in pediatrics versus 17% in surgery are women. Growth in the …