Harassment and Discrimination in Medical Training
Twitter (United States) · St. Michael's Hospital · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The authors included 57 cross-sectional and 2 cohort studies in their review. The meta-analysis of 51 studies demonstrated that 59.4% of medical trainees had experienced at least one form of harassment or discrimination during their training (95% confidence interval [CI]: 52.0%-66.7%). Verbal harassment was the most commonly cited form of harassment (prevalence: 63.0%; 95% CI: 54.8%-71.2%). Consultants were the most commonly cited source of harassment and discrimination, followed by patients or patients' families (34.4% and 21.9%, respectively).
This review demonstrates the surprisingly high prevalence of harassment and discrimination among medical trainees that has not declined over time. The authors recommend both drafting policies and promoting cultural change within academic institutions to prevent future abuse.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 40.33
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 56
Authors
10- NFNaif Fnais
Twitter (United States), St. Michael's Hospital, Association for the Study of Medical Education, Endometriosis
- CSCharlene Soobiah
Twitter (United States), St. Michael's Hospital, Association for the Study of Medical Education, Endometriosis
- MHMaggie Hong Chen
Twitter (United States), St. Michael's Hospital, Association for the Study of Medical Education, Endometriosis
- ELErin Lillie
Twitter (United States), St. Michael's Hospital, Association for the Study of Medical Education, Endometriosis
- LPLaure Perrier
Twitter (United States), St. Michael's Hospital, Association for the Study of Medical Education, Endometriosis
Topics & keywords
- Harassment
- Medicine
- Meta-analysis
- MEDLINE
- Family medicine
- Psychology
- Clinical psychology
- Nursing
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions