Background Sexual harassment has become a national concern andone that is increasingly recognized in the field of medicine.Although there are reports of the sexual harassment of medicaltrainees, there is little information on the prevalence of thisproblem and whether it is adequately addressed by training institutions.
Methods Surveys with descriptions and examples of sexual harassmentwere mailed to 133 internal medicine residents in a universitytraining program. The residents were asked to report anonymouslywhether they had encountered sexual harassment during medicalschool or residency, the frequency and type of harassment, itseffect on them, whether they chose to report it to a personin authority, and the factors that influenced this decision.
Results Surveys were returned by 82 residents (response rate,62 percent) -- 33 women and 49 men. Twenty-four women (73 percent)and 11 men (22 percent) reported that they had been sexuallyharassed at least once during their training. The women weremore likely than the men to have been physically harassed, andthe women's harassers were of higher professional status. Amongthose harassed, 19 of the women (79 percent) and 5 of the men(45 percent) thought that the experience created a hostile environmentor interfered with their performance at work, but only 2 womenand no men reported their experiences to an authority. The womencited a lack of confidence that they would be helped as themain reason for not reporting the experience, whereas men mostcommonly said that they had dealt with the problem without theneed for outside assistance.
Conclusions Many medical trainees encounter what they believeto be sexual harassment during medical school or residency,and this often creates a hostile learning and work environment.Training institutions need to address the adverse effects thismay have on medical education and patient care.
Source Information
From the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program (M.K.), and the Division of General Internal Medicine (A.B.B., R.J.H.) and the Department of Medicine (M.A.S.), San Francisco General Hospital -- all at the University of California, San Francisco.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Komaromy at the University of California, San Francisco, Suite C-126, 521 Parnassus Ave., San Francisco, CA 94143-0903.
Sexual Harassment in Medical Training
Farley M. M., Kozarsky P., Jensvold M. F., Mackey B., Young-Horvath V., Donaldson D. H., Frankel S. S., Laverson S., Komaromy M., Bindman A. B., Haber R. J., Sande M. A., Conley F. K.
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N Engl J Med 1993;
329:661-663, Aug 26, 1993.
Correspondence
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