Workplace discrimination common among liver doctors

female researcher
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Hepatologists—physicians who specialize in liver disease—say they experience workplace discrimination, especially if they are women or BIPOC (an acronym that stands for Black, Indigenous or People of Color). A new survey by a UW Medicine researcher resulted in this finding.

Dr. Lauren Feld, a transplant hepatology fellow at the University of Washington School of Medicine, presented her results at the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease this month. The study was conducted through the AASLD Women's Initiatives Committee.

Widespread has been described in other areas of medicine but less is known about discrimination in hepatology, said Feld during her presentation at the AASLD's Liver Meeting.

"Certainly these statistics are disturbing, but they are not surprising," she said.

Among the key findings:

  • 75 percent of women and 37 percent of men report workplace discrimination.
  • Twice as many women as men say they are not included in administrative decision-making.
  • More than 40 percent of women and 7.5 percent of men report being treated disrespectfully from nursing or support staff. Feld said in addition to impacting hepatologists personally, tensions can affect the quality of patient care.
  • About 40 percent of women and 13 percent of men report receiving unequal pay. Usually, women are just advised to "negotiate harder," Feld notes. "If the starting offer is different, or if women are viewed more negatively when they negotiate, then we should also be addressing the underlying systematic inequality."
  • About a quarter of women say they were held to higher standards of performance than their peers.
  • 17 percent of women feel they are not fairly considered for promotions or senior management positions.

When responses were sorted by ethnicity the reported increased.

  • Half the Black or Latina women doctors said they did not receive equivalent pay to their peers.
  • Black women doctors felt they were not consulted on or received fair considerations for promotions.
  • For BIPOC men, 35 percent of the Latinix men say they did not receive fair pay or benefits compared with their white counterparts.

In a separate but related study, Feld found that polices for hepatologists were patchy, if they existed at all. Where they did exist, the leave policies allowed for only seven weeks off or less.

"We are requiring our workforce to take significantly less leave than is recommended by our own medical societies," said Feld, who is due to have her second child soon.

About 70 percent of the doctors reported delaying having children because of how they may be viewed and how becoming mothers would impact their careers.

As for next steps, Feld said that the AASLD Women's Initiatives committee, on which she serves, is committed to advocacy and policy changes. It won't happen all at once, however.

Now, when a woman or minority man makes a complaint, the view is they need to negotiate harder or work to ignore someone who is throwing micro-aggressions their way, she noted. More needs to be done, she added, to work with administrators and leaders in the medical community to address these problems head on.

"Awareness is a good first step, but there needs to be a culture change, as well as training to provide inclusive work places and reversing harmful policies," Feld said.

Both surveys were sent out to 199 recipients through the AASLD list serve in January. The AASLD funded the study.

Citation: Workplace discrimination common among liver doctors (2021, November 23) retrieved 3 May 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-11-workplace-discrimination-common-liver-doctors.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Workplaces can do better to support women following miscarriage, says study

1 shares

Feedback to editors