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Women in white coats female physician role enactment in medical clinic interactions /Bohannon, Katie Lynn. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Boise State University, 2009. / Title from t.p. of PDF file (viewed May 27, 2010). Includes bibliographical references (leaves 75-79).
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An analysis of changes in perceptions of certified athletic trainers from 1996 to 2006 on the women in athletic training surveyDieringer, Katherine I. Contreras, Gloria, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--University of North Texas, May, 2007. / Title from title page display. Includes bibliographical references.
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Crafting the "she-doctor" Henry James' Dr. Mary J. Prance /Choi, Yeo Ju. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. in English)--Vanderbilt University, Aug. 2006. / Title from title screen. Includes bibliographical references.
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Alice Hamilton the making of a feminist-pragmatist rhetor /McCoy, Vicki J. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Georgia State University, 2005. / Title from title screen. James Darsey, committee chair; David Cheshier, Mary Stuckey, committee members. Electronic text (237 p.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed July 12, 2007. Includes bibliographical references.
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Perceptions of leadership among women in academic medicine: A case study comparing the perspectives of full-time faculty with and without institutionally defined leadership titlesHastie, Maya Jalbout January 2019 (has links)
Despite progress made over the past decade, women in medicine are underrepresented in advanced academic leadership positions. This qualitative case study explored the perceptions of full-time women faculty at one large urban academic medical center regarding leadership trajectories within academic medicine, comparing those who are and those who are not in institutionally-defined leadership roles. The purpose of the research was to explore participants’ perceptions of the characteristics of effective leadership, how they view their own leadership potential, what motivates them to (or not to) seek leadership positions, what facilitators and challenges they may face in seeking such positions, what rewards and sacrifices they may have experienced on their career paths, and how and what they learned in the process.
In-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 27 full-time women faculty members of one large urban academic medical center. The participants were recruited based on leadership positions, years in practice and specialties.
Several key findings emerged from the interviews. First, all participants described interpersonal skills as important elements of effective leadership in academic medicine. Second, women described gender biases in the workplace as challenges on their career paths. Also, work-life balance and the unique demands placed on working mothers were discussed. Third, mentoring relationships were perceived as facilitators of career advancement. Also, a majority of participants described having an interest in and self-efficacy toward leadership. Fourth, women described focusing their learning on acquiring organizational and administrative skills, through a combination of informal and formal learning. Most of the learning described was incidental and unplanned. Experiences were important for the incremental development of leadership proficiency. Women engaged in reflection to improve performance and to evaluate self. The benefits of engaging in communities of practice were described.
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Women physicians' specialty choices /Greer, Marilyn Jane. January 1994 (has links)
Advisor: Frank I. Moore. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 152-169).
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A feminist investigation into the reasons for attrition of women doctors from the South African medical profession and practice : exploring the case of UCT medical school between 1996 and 2005Wildschut, Angelique Colleen 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (DPhil)--University of Stellenbosch, 2011. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This dissertation aims to establish the reasons underlying possible gendered attrition
trends in the South African medical profession between 1996 and 2005. Noting the
international trend of the increasing feminisation of medical education and the profession,
the dissertation illustrates that this is also a reality in our national context, and frames this
phenomenon as being plagued by difficulties very similar to those encountered in other
traditionally male-dominated fields. The particular relevance for further research and
debate is illustrated through the noticed discrepancy between women’s representation in
enrolment and graduation at medical schools in South Africa, and their representation in
the profession itself. The decision to approach this investigation from a feministorganisational
perspective was based on the fact that this would not only be a novel, but
indeed also an appropriate, research approach to the study of gendered trends in medical
education and the profession within the South African context.
The research project thus sets out three main objectives relevant to this investigation.
Objective 1 aims to establish the sex composition of the cohort of medical graduates that
have not entered, or decided to exit, the medical profession. In terms of this objective,
findings show an increasing rate of progression of men into the profession, accompanied
by a decreasing rate of progression of women into the profession.
Objective 2 attempts to establish the reasons behind sex trends in South African medical
schools and in the profession. Thus, in an effort to comprehensively investigate the issues
underlying attrition, I employ a mixed-methods approach to the primary data collection
and analysis. Firstly, the findings show, through a quantitative analysis of the interview
data, that this sample of women felt that both institutional and societal factors influenced
a women doctor’s propensity to remain in the profession. Secondly, it is established that
whether these respondents felt that they had appropriate role models in the profession was
the most important factor in terms of their identification with, and propensity to stay in,
the profession. Thirdly, it was also found that the respondents felt strongly that the culture
of the medical profession impacts negatively on a woman doctor’s propensity to stay in
the profession, but similar to the findings of other studies, this does not bring us closer to
an understanding of what that culture constitutes. Thus, lastly, through a qualitative
analysis of the interview data I find that the respondents clearly recognise the presence of
a gendered substructure in medicine in the South African context, and identify some
elements of this structure as most commonly linked to attrition.
Objective 3, based on the outcomes of the previous objectives, aims to provide
recommendations for the retention of medical doctors in general, and women doctors
specifically, in the South African context. It concludes that flexibility1 in the medical
profession is paramount to the retention of doctors, and women doctors specifically. This
is a difficult challenge to overcome, as central values such as the importance of continuity
of care in the medical profession would suggest that providing increased flexibility to
medical doctors would impact negatively on patient care. However, it appears that there is
increasing recognition amongst scholars, policy makers and medical practitioners
themselves of the importance of acknowledging alternative work patterns.
On the basis of the outcomes of my research, it is clear that the national gender attrition
trends are a cause for concern in terms of resourcing the National Health System against
the backdrop of a widely acknowledged shortage of doctors in South Africa and
elsewhere. If women doctors do not progress effectively into the system, but form the
majority of graduates, this is a tragic loss, as well as a waste of resources during training.
This aspect also has policy implications, because it appears that the government, in trying
to retain doctors, has increasingly turned to measures that are restrictive (compulsory
community service, restrictions on foreign doctors), rather than focusing on ways in
which to make doctors want to stay. The dissertation thus closes by suggesting two main
areas within which these findings and recommendations would be employed most
usefully: 1) medical schools/ training/education, and 2) the medical profession/culture. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie proefskrif het ten doel om die redes onderliggende aan geslagsverskille in die
verlies van vroue uit die Suid-Afrikaanse mediese beroep tussen 1996 en 2005 vas te stel.
Die internasionale tendens van die toenemende vervrouliking van mediese opleiding en
die mediese beroep wys dat dit ook ‘n realiteit in die Suid-Afrikaanse nasionale konteks
is. Hierdie verskynsel word veroorsaak deur probleme soortgelyk aan dié wat in ander,
tradisioneel manlik gedomineerde beroepe ondervind word. Die spesifieke relevansie vir
verdere navorsing en debat word geïllustreer deur die aangetoonde proporsionele verskil
tussen vroue se inskrywing en graduering in mediese skole in Suid-Afrika, en hul
verteenwoordiging in die beroep self.
Die besluit om hierdie ondersoek uit ‘n feministies-organisatoriese perspektief te benader,
is nie net omdat dit ‘n oorspronklike benadering sou wees nie, maar ook gepas vir ‘n
studie van geslagstendense in die mediese onderwys en professie binne die Suid-
Afrikaans konteks.
Die navorsingsprojek bevestig dus drie hoofdoelstellings wat relevant tot hierdie
ondersoek is. Doelstelling een probeer om die geslagsamestelling van die kohort van
mediese gegradueerdes wat nie tot die beroep toegetree het nie, of dié wat besluit het om
die beroep te verlaat, te bepaal. Daar is bevind dat daar ‘n verhoogde koers van vordering
van mans tot die beroep is, gepaardgaande met ‘n verlaagde koers van vordering van
vroue tot die beroep.
Doelstelling twee probeer om die redes onderliggende aan die geslagstendense in die
mediese skool en die beroep vas te stel. Dus, om ‘n omvattende ondersoek te doen om uit
te vind wat onderliggend aan die verlies is, het ek van ‘n gemengde metode benadering tot
data insameling en analise gebruik gemaak. Die resultate van die onderhoud data wys dat
hierdie vroue voel dat beide institusionele en sosiale faktore ‘n vroulike dokter se besluit
om in die beroep te bly, beïnvloed. Tweedens is daar vasgestel dat geskikte rolmodelle in
die beroep die belangrikste faktor is in vroue se identifikasie met die beroep, en hulle
besluit om in die beroep te bly. Derdens is gevind dat die respondente baie sterk voel dat
die kultuur van die mediese beroep ’n negatiewe impak het op ‘n vroulike dokter se
besluit om in die beroep te bly, maar soos ook in ander studies bevind is, bring dit ons nie
nader aan ‘n begrip van die aard van die kultuur nie. Ten slotte is daar dus met die
onderhoud data gevind dat die respondente duidelik bewus is van die teenwoordigheid
van ‘n geslagsubstruktuur in die mediese beroep in Suid-Afrika. Ek identifiseer ook
sekere elemente van hierdie struktuur wat bydra tot die verlies van vroulike dokters uit die
mediese beroep.
Doelstelling drie, gebaseer op die uitkomste van die vorige doelstellings, probeer om
aanbevelings te maak vir die behoud van mediese dokters in die algemeen, en vroulike
dokters spesifiek. Die gevolgtrekking is dat buigsaamheid in die werkskultuur van die
mediese beroep van kardinale belang is vir die behoud van dokters in die algemeen, en
vroulike dokters meer spesifiek. Dit is ‘n moeilike uitdaging om te oorkom omdat sentrale
waardes, soos die belang van kontinuïteit van versorging in die beroep, persepsies laat
ontstaan dat meer buigsaamheid in werksomstandighede ‘n negatiewe impak op die
versorging van pasiënte sou hê. Dit blyk egter ook dat daar ‘n toenemende erkenning is
deur akademici, beleidsontwerpers en mediese praktisyns self van die belang van
alternatiewe werkspatrone.
Gebaseer op die resultate van die ondersoek is dit duidelik dat die nasionale
geslagsverliestendense ‘n rede tot kommer vir die verskaffing van menslike hulpbronne
vir die nasionale gesondheidstelsel is, veral teen die agtergrond van ‘n algemeen erkende
tekort aan dokters in Suid-Afrika. As vroulike dokters nie effektief in die stelsel
opgeneem word nie, hoewel hulle die meerderheid van gegradueerdes is, is dit ‘n tragiese
verlies en vermorsing van hulpbronne wat vir opleiding gebruik is. Dit het ook
implikasies vir beleid omdat dit blyk dat die Suid-Afrikaanse regering, in sy pogings om
dokters te behou, meermale maatreëls gebruik wat perke stel (verpligte
gemeenskapsdiens, beperkings vir buitelandse dokters, ens.), waar hulle eerder behoort te
fokus op maniere om dokters in Suid-Afrika te hou. Ten slotte stel die proefskrif twee
hoofareas voor waarin hierdie bevindings en aanbevelings aangewend kan word: 1)
mediese skole/opleiding/onderwys, en 2) die mediese beroep/kultuur.
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An Analysis of Changes in Perceptions of Certified Athletic Trainers from 1996 to 2006 on the Women in Athletic Training SurveyDieringer, Katherine I. 05 1900 (has links)
This study investigates how perceptions vary in athletic trainers regarding issues pertaining to women in the profession. Subjects included 1500 male and 1500 female certified athletic trainers who responded to 44 demographic and perceptions survey items used to determine whether perceptions were different based on the respondent's gender. Results were compared to a previously disseminated survey in 1996 to also determine if perceptions had changed from 10 years earlier. Results regarding the presentation of awards and the attainment of leadership positions in the organization were also compared to actual data collected. The data suggested that males perceptions had not changed, but females' perceptions had changed, in that females perceived that opportunities had improved. Data regarding the number of females who had ascended to leadership positions or had received awards did not support these perceptions, however, and female athletic trainers continue to struggle to obtain equality in both of these areas. Additionally, homosocial reproduction continues to influence the decreased number of women who are hired into various jobs, or advance into leadership positions, maintaining patriarchy in the athletics arena and in the athletic training organizations. Results suggested that because athletic training has been dominated by men since its inception, patriarchy continues to influence the lack of ascension of women into leadership positions and awards recognition. Many women are choosing to leave the profession due to the gender role pressure that they can not sustain a career in athletic training and raise a family. Men's professional sports continue to reject the concept of hiring women to serve as athletic trainers with their athletes, which also continues to preserve a patriarchal environment.
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Accommodating women's learning in continuing medical educationDixon, Corrina Aloyse 01 January 2004 (has links)
The purpose of this project was to present continuing medical education providers with a handbook that presents current perspectives on women's learning and suggests practice guidelines that can be incorporated into the planning of existing and future medical education activities.
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