Factors Associated With Gender Distribution in Academic Rhinology
Alison J. Yu, Stephanie Wong, Kevin Herrera, Daniel Palmieri, Bozena Wrobel, Tamara Chambers, Nadia Chan

TL;DR
This study finds that female representation in academic rhinology is low and linked to departmental gender dynamics.
Contribution
Identifies departmental factors influencing female representation in academic rhinology.
Findings
Female rhinologists comprise 26.8% of fellowship-trained professionals.
Female representation decreases with higher academic ranks.
Departments with more female faculty have higher female rhinologist representation.
Abstract
Women have been underrepresented in academic medicine and surgical fields. This study aimed to describe the gender distribution in academic rhinology and investigate otolaryngology departmental factors associated with female rhinologists representation. Cross‐sectional study. American Medical Association (AMA) FREIDA database, American Rhinologic Society database, and online search. We identified fellowship‐trained rhinologists from institutional searches of residency programs identified from the AMA FREIDA database. Demographic and academic data of each rhinologist were extracted from online search. Departmental characteristics were obtained from the FREIDA database and institutional websites. The associations between female rhinologists representation and departmental factors were assessed using logistic regression analyses. Among 224 fellowship‐trained rhinologists, female…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiversity and Career in Medicine · Innovations in Medical Education · Health and Medical Research Impacts
