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Are There Too Many Women Doctors?

Posted by artfldgr On June - 2 - 2008

Women are exactly the same as men, except when their not. Recent article and blog noise has been bantering the point made by Business Week Article that informs us that we now have more female doctors which is great, but that they spend less time at the office, so you dont get to see them.

Remember the days when the doctor joke would be about alchohol, golf, and a new receptionist, but somehow, the doctor found time to see patients. Today, we are being made aware that while the school, expertise, time to train, and expense for training a woman or a man is the same, we get more out of the men than we do the women.

Now that we are producing more women doctors than men, we are going to have a shortage, as they dont seem to have the time (or as much desire), to actually see patients. I guess the male doctors made it look easy, but we are once again up against the situation where ideology is up against reality, and guess who ALWAYS wins eventually?

Now Business Week and others no longer are arguing projections and "what if’s" they are now arguing "what IS". This is now leading to the point that we are producing too many female graduates surpassing equality to majority, and due to affirmative action, they are potentially not as rigourously selected for.

 

As an MD shortage looms, female physicians and their flexible hours are taking some of the blame
 
Finding a doctor could soon be even harder than paying for one. Various studies have projected a shortfall of anywhere from 50,000 to 100,000 physicians in the U.S. relative to demand by 2020, and the Institute of Medicine, a federal advisory body, just reported that in a mere three years senior citizens will be facing a health-care workforce that is "too small and woefully unprepared."
 
This looming shortage is forcing into the open a controversy that has been cautiously debated in hospitals and medical practices for some time: Are women doctors part of the problem? It’s not the abilities of female doctors that are in question. It’s that study after study has found women doctors tend to work 20% to 25% fewer hours than their male counterparts.
 
The British Medical Journal went public with the debate on Apr. 5 when it published a commentary by Dr. Brian McKinstry, a general practitioner at Scotland’s University of Edinburgh, titled "Are There Too Many Female Medical Graduates? Yes." McKinstry argues that "society still expects women rather than men to reduce work commitments to look after children and not to return to full-time work until the children are older." He laments the unfairness of it all but concludes that "in the absence of a profound change in our society in terms of responsibility for childcare, we need to take a balanced approach to recruitment."
 
Plenty of medical staffing experts reject the notion that women should shoulder the blame. Even McKinstry does not want to set the clock back to the 1970s, when only 10% of U.S. doctors were women. Today women account for one-third of the physician workforce. In U.S. medical schools, they make up half the class.
 
But even those who disagree with McKinstry’s position acknowledge that women doctors in the U.S. work less—47 hours per week on average, versus 53 for men. They also see about 10% fewer patients and tend to take more time off early in their careers. "It’s pretty much an even bet that within a year or two of entering practice they will go on maternity leave," says Phillip Miller, a vice-president of the medical recruiting firm Merritt, Hawkins & Associates. "Then they are going to want more flexible hours."
 
Such demands tend to irritate older doctors. "The young women in our practice are always looking to get out of being on-call," says a male internist at a large New York-area medical group who asked not to be named. "The rest of us have to pick up the slack. That really stirs up a lot of resentment."
 
On the plus side, women are willing to take on lower-paying specialties that male doctors are moving away from, such as primary care, pediatrics, and obstetrics. Since 1996 there has been a 40% jump in the number of women choosing primary care, offsetting the 16% decline in men entering the field.
 
A lighter workload also has its advantages. "Lots of studies show that doctors who work fewer hours have less burnout," says Dr. Joseph Flaherty, dean of University of Illinois College of Medicine. "There is a strong association between long hours and medical errors."
 
The issue of shorter work weeks may in fact be as much generational as gender-based. Newly minted male doctors are also rejecting the heroic 80-hour weeks put in by physicians of yesteryear. Ultimately, medicine will have to accommodate the lifestyle demands of a younger generation if it is to address the physician shortage, says Dr. Nancy Oriol, dean of students for Harvard Medical School. "If there is a problem with retention, it might serve us well to investigate details of the career paths themselves."
 
study after study has found women doctors tend to work 20% to 25% fewer hours than their male counterparts.
 
If this is true, then when all other points are considered, we get 20-25% less work out of female doctors per educational investment than we do with men. Put in terms that leftists can understand in their central planning offices, that when planning output 4 male doctors do the work of 5 female doctors. This was definitely not what the ideological premises promised.
 
Debbie Schlussel has been commenting on this, but has an interesting article that brings the problem out into the open. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

4 Responses

  1. Eye Doc Said,

    Medical schools don’t lose money training physicians. In fact, they actually make money as the interns and residents see patients and bill under the auspices of the medical college while taking home very little in salary. At least that’s the way it was amillion years ago when i was in training. Medical students also pay a small fortune in tuition payments.

    The “educational investment” you speak of is made by those in training. So, if their “output” (and I would hesitate to refer to patients seen as output) is lower than that of other physicians, that is really their business and that of that of the other physicians they practice with, and not the medical education system or society in general.

    As far as quality of care goes, there’s no proof I’ve ever seen that doctors working longer hours, taking more call etc. provide better medical care. In fact, some of the most incompetent doctors I’ve ever seen were obsessive about work, and were always in the hospital seeing their patients.

    People need to used to the new reality. Medicine has become a far less attractive profession and it’s getting worse all the time. There will be fewer physicians going forward willing to sacrifice everything to the exclusion of their medical practice and that’s not necessarilly a bad thing. If you’ve never trained to be a physician and practiced medicine I think that’s a difficult thing to understand.

    Posted on June 2nd, 2008 at 9:15 am

  2. TheManOnTheStreet Said,

    Equal pay for equal work….Uhuh….

    TMOTS

    Posted on June 4th, 2008 at 1:11 am

  3. OB Nurse Said,

    I work in a large teaching hospital and so many of our OB residents and attendings are women. What’s the difference? When women are doing c/sections it takes much longer to get the baby out. They are much smaller and have less body strength than do the male physicians. In an emergeny, I’d like at least one male OB/GYN.

    Posted on June 16th, 2008 at 4:38 pm

  4. TigerMan Said,

    Why are WE being told this because the MAJORITY of the population is not made up of those who put their ideology before logic and common sense. We are the poor suuffering TAXPAYERS who I guess NAIVELY(given the track record) expect that those who are in charge of disbursing our our hard earned tax dollars actually have the COMMON GOOD in mind when they form policies and laws. Lets not kid ourselves this is just yet another instance when it has been proved that those with their snouts in the trough have no right to be on the farm let alone privileged diners at the expense of our largess. The so called ‘entitlement culture’ which is eroding and undermining the very foundation upon which stable and sustainable society is based is a problem we EXPECT to be solved by those who have the position and time to solve them and not to pass their failures onto US the poor taxpayers who have been funding the folly of these parasites albeit unwillingly!!!

    Posted on June 30th, 2008 at 10:08 am

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