Issue: February 2017
December 22, 2016
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Personal, professional lives of cardiologists vary between sexes

Issue: February 2017
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The results of the American College of Cardiology third decennial Professional Life Survey showed substantial differences in personal and professional characteristics between sexes among cardiologists.

“Discrimination continues to be an issue reported by a clear majority of female cardiologists,” Claire Duvernoy, MD, FACC, associate professor of medicine (cardiology) at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and chair of the ACC Women in Cardiology Council, and colleagues wrote. “Addressing the changing demographics and practice settings of the workforce, increasing diversity and achieving parity in race and sex continue to be important goals for the cardiology community.”

The survey included data collected from 2,313 cardiologists and fellows-in-training (42% women) who responded out of 10,798 who were emailed an invitation in 2015 to participate in the survey. The survey was previously conducted in 1996 and 2006.

Demographic changes

The data showed a large change in demographics in the past 20 years. For example, there was a significant reduction in cardiologists working in private practice compared with 10 and 20 years ago (21% vs. 31% and 49%, respectively).

A greater percentage of respondents were aged 60 years or older than in previous studies (men: 17% in 2015, 15% in 2006, 11% in 1996; women: 18% in 2015, 8% in 2006, 6% in 1996), according to the authors.

Most participants were white (63% in 2015; 76% in 2006) or Asian/Pacific Islander (21% in 2015; 15% in 2006), although women were more likely to be black (4% vs. 2%; P < .01) and men were more likely to be Hispanic (6% vs. 3%; P < .01), Duvernoy and colleagues wrote.

Women were more likely to work in a medical school/university practice compared with men (43% vs. 34%; P .001), but less likely to work in a hospital-owned (33% vs 37%; P .001) or physician-owned (17% vs. 23%; P .001) setting.

Compared with men, women were more likely to practice clinical cardiology (48% vs. 39%; P .001) or echocardiography (10% vs. 3%; P .001) but less likely to practice interventional cardiology (23% vs. 8%; P .001) or electrophysiology (10% vs. 6%; P .01), the authors wrote.

Career satisfaction was reported similarly for both sexes, with men and women reporting being moderately to very satisfied with their careers (90% and 88%, respectively). However, women were less likely to report that they had advanced higher than their colleagues and were more likely to report that their advancements were less significant than their peers; this did not change significantly in the last 20 years, Duvernoy and colleagues wrote.

Reports of discrimination

Women were nearly three times more likely than men to report experiencing discrimination, although the percentage of women reporting discrimination declined from 71% in 1996 to 65% in 2015 (P .05), the authors wrote. Women in practice longer than 10 years were more likely to report discrimination than those in practice less than 10 years (P .001).

Men were more likely than women to report being married (89% vs. 75%; P .001) and having children (87% vs. 72%; P .001), whereas 57% of men reported that their spouse provided all child care vs. just 13% of women (P .001). Women were more likely than men to report that family responsibilities hindered their ability to do professional work (P .001) and travel for professional advancement (P .01).

According to a press release from the ACC, in 2013, just 13% of cardiologists were women.

“We need to increase the diversity of our workforce, and find ways to recruit higher numbers of women and underrepresented minorities,” Duvernoy said in the release. “While we are heartened by the finding that the vast majority of cardiologists, both men and women, report high levels of career satisfaction, it is clear that much remains to be done to improve the field for everyone.” – by Dave Quaile

Disclosure: The authors report no relevant financial disclosures.