Perception of Residency Program Diversity Is Associated With Vulnerability to Race and Gender Stereotype Threat Among Minority and Female Orthopaedic Trainees.

IF 2.3 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS JBJS Open Access Pub Date : 2025-01-07 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.2106/JBJS.OA.24.00084
Risa T Reid, Susan M Odum, Patrick J Rosopa, Jaysson T Brooks, Brian P Scannell, Selina Poon, Tyler Williams, Joshua C Patt, Gabriella E Ode
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Abstract

Introduction: Stereotype threat (ST) is a psychological phenomenon in which perceived fear of confirming negative stereotypes about one's identity group leads to impaired performance. Gender and racial ST has been described in various academic settings. However, it is prevalence in orthopaedic surgery, where women and minorities are underrepresented, has not been examined. This study analyzes the prevalence of ST among orthopaedic surgery residents and fellows.

Methods: US orthopaedic trainees completed a voluntary anonymous survey, which included demographics, perceived program diversity based on percentage of racial-ethnic and gender-diverse faculty and trainees, and a validated, modified version of the Stereotype Vulnerability Scale (SVS). Higher scores indicate greater ST vulnerability. ST prevalence was analyzed with descriptive statistics, and associations between program diversity, resident demographics, and ST vulnerability were compared using nonparametric tests.

Results: Of 1,127 orthopaedic trainees at 40 programs, 322 responded (response rate 28.6%). Twenty-five percent identified as female, and 26% identified as an underrepresented minority in medicine (i.e., Asian, Black, or Hispanic). Asian (12 points), Black (12.5 points), and Hispanic (13.5 points) trainees had significantly higher SVS scores than White trainees (9 points) (p = 0.0003; p < 0.0001; p = 0.0028, respectively). Black trainees at perceived racially nondiverse residencies had the highest mean SVS scores (16.4 ± 1.03 points), while White trainees at perceived racially nondiverse residencies had the lowest SVS scores (9.3 ± 0.3 points), p = 0.011. Women had significantly higher gender stereotype vulnerability than men (p < 0.0001) in both gender-diverse (17.9 ± 0.2 vs. 9.0 ± 0.3 points) and gender nondiverse residencies (16.4 ± 0.4 vs. 9.6 ± 0.2 points).

Conclusion: Minority and female orthopaedic trainees had higher ST vulnerability, especially in programs perceived as lacking racial or gender diversity. While perceived program diversity may offer some protection for minority and women trainees, women trainees still met the threshold for high vulnerability regardless of program gender diversity. Future strategies to mitigate ST should be explored in orthopaedic training.

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少数族裔和女性骨科实习生对住院医师项目多样性的认知与种族和性别刻板印象威胁的脆弱性相关。
刻板印象威胁是一种心理现象,在这种心理现象中,人们对确认自己身份群体的负面刻板印象感到恐惧,从而导致表现受损。性别和种族ST在各种学术环境中都有描述。然而,在女性和少数民族代表性不足的骨科手术中,尚未对其患病率进行调查。本研究分析了骨科住院医师和研究员中ST的患病率。方法:美国骨科受训者完成了一项自愿匿名调查,包括人口统计学、基于种族、民族和性别多样化的教师和受训者百分比的项目多样性感知,以及经过验证的修正版刻板印象脆弱性量表(SVS)。分数越高表明ST的脆弱性越大。采用描述性统计分析ST患病率,并采用非参数检验比较项目多样性、居民人口统计和ST脆弱性之间的关系。结果:在40个项目的1127名骨科学员中,322名有应答,应答率为28.6%。25%被认为是女性,26%被认为是医学界代表性不足的少数群体(即亚洲人、黑人或西班牙裔)。亚裔(12分)、黑人(12.5分)和西班牙裔(13.5分)受训者的SVS得分显著高于白人(9分)(p = 0.0003;P < 0.0001;P = 0.0028)。黑人实习医师的SVS得分最高(16.4±1.03分),白人实习医师的SVS得分最低(9.3±0.3分),p = 0.011。女性在性别多样化(17.9±0.2比9.0±0.3分)和非性别多样化(16.4±0.4比9.6±0.2分)居住环境中的性别刻板印象脆弱性均显著高于男性(p < 0.0001)。结论:少数民族和女性骨科受训者有更高的ST脆弱性,特别是在缺乏种族或性别多样性的项目中。尽管感知到的项目多样性可能会为少数民族和女性受训者提供一些保护,但无论项目性别多样性如何,女性受训者仍然达到了高度脆弱性的门槛。未来的策略,以减轻ST应探讨骨科培训。
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来源期刊
JBJS Open Access
JBJS Open Access Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
77
审稿时长
6 weeks
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