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Assessing gender bias in qualitative evaluations of surgical residents
Authors:Katherine M Gerull  Maren Loe  Kristen Seiler  Jared McAllister  Arghavan Salles
Institution:1. Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, United States;2. Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States
Abstract:

Background

There are notable disparities in the training, recruitment, promotion, and evaluation of men and women in surgery. The qualitative assessment of surgical residents may be implicitly gender biased.

Methods

We used inductive analysis to identify themes in written evaluations of residents. We also performed a content analysis of words fitting previously defined communal, grindstone, ability, and standout categories.

Results

Differences in themes that emerged from evaluations of male and female residents were notable regarding overall performance, references to the future, professional competency, job domains, disposition and humanism, and overall tone of evaluations. Comments about men were more positive than those about women, and evaluations of men included more standout words.

Conclusions

The more positive evaluations of men may handicap women if they are seen as less likely to perform well based on these evaluations. These differences suggest that implicit bias may play a role in the qualitative evaluation of surgical residents.
Keywords:Gender bias  Performance review  Residency  Evaluation  Qualitative
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