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60 Years After the First Woman Cardiac Surgeon: We Still Need More Women in Cardiac Surgery

In 1960, Dr Nina Starr Braunwald became the first woman to perform open heart surgery. Sixty years later, despite the fact that women outnumbered men in American medical school in 2017, men still dominate the field of cardiac surgery. Women surgeons remain underrepresented in cardiac surgery; 11% of...

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Autores principales: Gao, Sophie Weiwei, Forcillo, Jessica, Watkins, Amelia Claire, Antonoff, Mara B., Luc, Jessica G.Y., Chung, Jennifer C.Y., Ritchie, Laura, Eikelboom, Rachel, Shashidharan, Subhadra, Maruyama, Michiko, Whitlock, Richard P., Ouzounian, Maral, Belley-Côté, Emilie P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8712594/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34993438
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cjco.2021.07.012
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author Gao, Sophie Weiwei
Forcillo, Jessica
Watkins, Amelia Claire
Antonoff, Mara B.
Luc, Jessica G.Y.
Chung, Jennifer C.Y.
Ritchie, Laura
Eikelboom, Rachel
Shashidharan, Subhadra
Maruyama, Michiko
Whitlock, Richard P.
Ouzounian, Maral
Belley-Côté, Emilie P.
author_facet Gao, Sophie Weiwei
Forcillo, Jessica
Watkins, Amelia Claire
Antonoff, Mara B.
Luc, Jessica G.Y.
Chung, Jennifer C.Y.
Ritchie, Laura
Eikelboom, Rachel
Shashidharan, Subhadra
Maruyama, Michiko
Whitlock, Richard P.
Ouzounian, Maral
Belley-Côté, Emilie P.
author_sort Gao, Sophie Weiwei
collection PubMed
description In 1960, Dr Nina Starr Braunwald became the first woman to perform open heart surgery. Sixty years later, despite the fact that women outnumbered men in American medical school in 2017, men still dominate the field of cardiac surgery. Women surgeons remain underrepresented in cardiac surgery; 11% of practicing cardiac surgeons in Canada were women in 2015, and 6% of practicing adult cardiac surgeons in the US were women in 2019. Although women remain a minority in other surgical specialties also, cardiothoracic surgery remains one of the most unevenly–gender distributed specialties. Why are there so few women cardiac surgeons, and why does it matter? Evidence is emerging regarding the benefits of diversity for a variety of industries, including healthcare. In order to attract and retain the best talent, we must make the cardiac surgery environment more diverse, equitable, and inclusive. Some causes of perpetuation of the gender gap have been documented in the literature—these include uneven compensation and career advancement opportunities, outdated views on family dynamics, and disproportionate scrutiny of women surgeons, causing additional workplace frictions for women. Diversity is an organizational strength, and gender-diverse institutions are more likely to outperform their non-gender-diverse counterparts. Modifiable issues perpetuate the gender gap, and mentorship is key in helping attract, develop, and retain the best and brightest within cardiac surgery. Facilitating mentorship opportunities is key to reducing barriers and bridging the gap.
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spelling pubmed-87125942022-01-05 60 Years After the First Woman Cardiac Surgeon: We Still Need More Women in Cardiac Surgery Gao, Sophie Weiwei Forcillo, Jessica Watkins, Amelia Claire Antonoff, Mara B. Luc, Jessica G.Y. Chung, Jennifer C.Y. Ritchie, Laura Eikelboom, Rachel Shashidharan, Subhadra Maruyama, Michiko Whitlock, Richard P. Ouzounian, Maral Belley-Côté, Emilie P. CJC Open Review In 1960, Dr Nina Starr Braunwald became the first woman to perform open heart surgery. Sixty years later, despite the fact that women outnumbered men in American medical school in 2017, men still dominate the field of cardiac surgery. Women surgeons remain underrepresented in cardiac surgery; 11% of practicing cardiac surgeons in Canada were women in 2015, and 6% of practicing adult cardiac surgeons in the US were women in 2019. Although women remain a minority in other surgical specialties also, cardiothoracic surgery remains one of the most unevenly–gender distributed specialties. Why are there so few women cardiac surgeons, and why does it matter? Evidence is emerging regarding the benefits of diversity for a variety of industries, including healthcare. In order to attract and retain the best talent, we must make the cardiac surgery environment more diverse, equitable, and inclusive. Some causes of perpetuation of the gender gap have been documented in the literature—these include uneven compensation and career advancement opportunities, outdated views on family dynamics, and disproportionate scrutiny of women surgeons, causing additional workplace frictions for women. Diversity is an organizational strength, and gender-diverse institutions are more likely to outperform their non-gender-diverse counterparts. Modifiable issues perpetuate the gender gap, and mentorship is key in helping attract, develop, and retain the best and brightest within cardiac surgery. Facilitating mentorship opportunities is key to reducing barriers and bridging the gap. Elsevier 2021-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC8712594/ /pubmed/34993438 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cjco.2021.07.012 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Gao, Sophie Weiwei
Forcillo, Jessica
Watkins, Amelia Claire
Antonoff, Mara B.
Luc, Jessica G.Y.
Chung, Jennifer C.Y.
Ritchie, Laura
Eikelboom, Rachel
Shashidharan, Subhadra
Maruyama, Michiko
Whitlock, Richard P.
Ouzounian, Maral
Belley-Côté, Emilie P.
60 Years After the First Woman Cardiac Surgeon: We Still Need More Women in Cardiac Surgery
title 60 Years After the First Woman Cardiac Surgeon: We Still Need More Women in Cardiac Surgery
title_full 60 Years After the First Woman Cardiac Surgeon: We Still Need More Women in Cardiac Surgery
title_fullStr 60 Years After the First Woman Cardiac Surgeon: We Still Need More Women in Cardiac Surgery
title_full_unstemmed 60 Years After the First Woman Cardiac Surgeon: We Still Need More Women in Cardiac Surgery
title_short 60 Years After the First Woman Cardiac Surgeon: We Still Need More Women in Cardiac Surgery
title_sort 60 years after the first woman cardiac surgeon: we still need more women in cardiac surgery
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8712594/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34993438
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cjco.2021.07.012
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