Gender Diversity in Canadian Surgical Residency

Background: Diversity of gender representation in surgery is known to positively influence patient outcomes and predict career trajectories for female trainees. This study aims to identify the current and recent past state of gender diversity amongst trainees entering Canadian surgical residency pro...

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Main Authors: Rahim H. Valji, Sheharzad Mahmood, Kevin Verhoeff, Simon R. Turner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-12-01
Series:Surgeries
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2673-4095/6/1/2
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author Rahim H. Valji
Sheharzad Mahmood
Kevin Verhoeff
Simon R. Turner
author_facet Rahim H. Valji
Sheharzad Mahmood
Kevin Verhoeff
Simon R. Turner
author_sort Rahim H. Valji
collection DOAJ
description Background: Diversity of gender representation in surgery is known to positively influence patient outcomes and predict career trajectories for female trainees. This study aims to identify the current and recent past state of gender diversity amongst trainees entering Canadian surgical residency programs. Methods: Data were sourced from the Canadian Post-M.D. Education Registry (CAPER) and the Canadian Resident Matching Service (CaRMs) for ten surgical specialties. CAPER data include PGY-1 trainees in all surgical specialties for the academic years 2012–2013 to 2021–2022. CaRMs provided data of total applicants and matched applicants for Canadian Medical Graduates (CMGs) in the match years 2013–2022. Results: From 2012–2022, there were 4011 PGY-1 surgical residents across Canada (50.4% female, 49.6% male). The surgical specialties with the most female representation were obstetrics/gynecology (82.1–91.9%), general surgery (40.2–70.7%), and plastic surgery (33.3–55.6%). The surgical specialties with the least female representation were neurosurgery (18.7–35.3%), urology (11.8–42%), and orthopedic surgery (17.5–38.5%). The number of female applicants to surgical programs has increased since 2013 and outnumbers male applicants each subsequent year. The match rate to surgical programs for female applicants has varied by year, with the highest being 63.9% in 2014 and the lowest in 2018 at 48.8%. Conclusions: Our study shows promising trends that reflect increased representation of female trainees. However, while the number of female trainees in general surgery and obstetrics/gynecology programs matches and even exceeds Canadian demographic proportions, this is not true for most other surgical specialties. This calls for continued efforts to improve and retain gender equity across surgical specialties in Canada.
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spelling doaj-art-88bd7b51e5ab45819085441b583f4de92025-08-20T02:43:09ZengMDPI AGSurgeries2673-40952024-12-0161210.3390/surgeries6010002Gender Diversity in Canadian Surgical ResidencyRahim H. Valji0Sheharzad Mahmood1Kevin Verhoeff2Simon R. Turner3Department of Surgery, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T5H 3V9, CanadaDepartment of Surgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, CanadaDepartment of Surgery, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T5H 3V9, CanadaDepartment of Surgery, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T5H 3V9, CanadaBackground: Diversity of gender representation in surgery is known to positively influence patient outcomes and predict career trajectories for female trainees. This study aims to identify the current and recent past state of gender diversity amongst trainees entering Canadian surgical residency programs. Methods: Data were sourced from the Canadian Post-M.D. Education Registry (CAPER) and the Canadian Resident Matching Service (CaRMs) for ten surgical specialties. CAPER data include PGY-1 trainees in all surgical specialties for the academic years 2012–2013 to 2021–2022. CaRMs provided data of total applicants and matched applicants for Canadian Medical Graduates (CMGs) in the match years 2013–2022. Results: From 2012–2022, there were 4011 PGY-1 surgical residents across Canada (50.4% female, 49.6% male). The surgical specialties with the most female representation were obstetrics/gynecology (82.1–91.9%), general surgery (40.2–70.7%), and plastic surgery (33.3–55.6%). The surgical specialties with the least female representation were neurosurgery (18.7–35.3%), urology (11.8–42%), and orthopedic surgery (17.5–38.5%). The number of female applicants to surgical programs has increased since 2013 and outnumbers male applicants each subsequent year. The match rate to surgical programs for female applicants has varied by year, with the highest being 63.9% in 2014 and the lowest in 2018 at 48.8%. Conclusions: Our study shows promising trends that reflect increased representation of female trainees. However, while the number of female trainees in general surgery and obstetrics/gynecology programs matches and even exceeds Canadian demographic proportions, this is not true for most other surgical specialties. This calls for continued efforts to improve and retain gender equity across surgical specialties in Canada.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-4095/6/1/2gender diversitysurgeryresidency
spellingShingle Rahim H. Valji
Sheharzad Mahmood
Kevin Verhoeff
Simon R. Turner
Gender Diversity in Canadian Surgical Residency
Surgeries
gender diversity
surgery
residency
title Gender Diversity in Canadian Surgical Residency
title_full Gender Diversity in Canadian Surgical Residency
title_fullStr Gender Diversity in Canadian Surgical Residency
title_full_unstemmed Gender Diversity in Canadian Surgical Residency
title_short Gender Diversity in Canadian Surgical Residency
title_sort gender diversity in canadian surgical residency
topic gender diversity
surgery
residency
url https://www.mdpi.com/2673-4095/6/1/2
work_keys_str_mv AT rahimhvalji genderdiversityincanadiansurgicalresidency
AT sheharzadmahmood genderdiversityincanadiansurgicalresidency
AT kevinverhoeff genderdiversityincanadiansurgicalresidency
AT simonrturner genderdiversityincanadiansurgicalresidency