Are You Really the Doctor? Physician Experiences with Gendered Microaggressions from Patients. Journal of women's health (2002) Ahmad, S. R., Ahmad, T. R., Balasubramanian, V., Facente, S., Kin, C., Girod, S. 2021

Abstract

Background: In contrast to physician implicit bias toward patients, bias and microaggressions from patients toward physicians have received comparatively less attention. Materials and Methods: We captured physician experiences of gendered microaggressions from patients by conducting a mixed-methods survey-based study of physicians at a single academic health care institution in May 2019. A quantitative portion assessed the frequency of gendered microaggressions (microaggression experiences [ME] score) and the association with measures of perceived impacts (job satisfaction, burnout, perceived career impacts, behavioral modifications). A one-tailed Wilcoxon rank sum test compared distributional frequencies of microaggressions by gender, and by gender and race. Chi-square tests measured the associations between gendered microaggressions and perceived impacts. Welch two-sample t-tests assessed differences in ME scores by rank and specialty. Linear regression assessed the association of ME scores and job satisfaction/burnout. A qualitative portion solicited anecdotal experiences, analyzed by inductive thematic analysis. Results: There were 297 completed surveys (response rate 27%). Female physicians experienced a significantly higher frequency of gendered microaggressions (p<0.001) compared with male physicians. Microaggressions were significantly associated with job satisfaction (chi-square 6.83, p=0.009), burnout (chi-square 8.76, p=0.003), perceived career impacts (chi-square 18.67, p<0.001), and behavioral modifications (chi-square 19.96, p<0.001). Trainees experienced more microaggressions (p=0.009) and burnout (p=0.009) than faculty. Higher ME scores predicted statistically significant increases in burnout (p<0.0001) and reduced job satisfaction (p=0.02). Twelve microaggressions themes emerged from the qualitative responses, including role questioning and assumption of inexperience. The frequency of microaggressions did not vary significantly by race; however, qualitative responses described race as a factor. Conclusions: Physicians experience gendered microaggressions from patients, which may influence job satisfaction, burnout, career perceptions, and behavior. Future research may explore the multidirectionality of microaggressions and tools for responding at the individual and institutional level.

View details for DOI 10.1089/jwh.2021.0169

View details for PubMedID 34747651