References
1. Spector ND, Overholser B. Examining gender disparity in medicine and setting a course forward. JAMA Netw Open 2019;2:e196484.
3. Herzke C, Bonsall J, Bertram A, et al. Gender issues in academic hospital medicine: a national survey of hospitalist leaders. J Gen Intern Med 2020; 35:1641.
5. Jena AB, Khullar D, Ho O, et al. Sex differences in academic rank in US medical schools in 2014. JAMA 2015;314:1149–1158.
6. Richter KP, Clark L, Wick JA, et al. Women physicians and promotion in academic medicine. N Engl J Med 2020;383:2148–2157.
7. Pelley E, Carnes M. When a specialty becomes “women’s work”: trends in and implications of specialty gender segregation in medicine. Acad Med 2020;95:1499–1506.
8. Mehta LS, Fisher K, Rzeszut AK, et al. Current demographic status of cardiologists in the United States. JAMA Cardiol 2019;4:1029–1033.
9. Douglas PS, Rzeszut AK, Bairey Merz CN, et al. Career preferences and perceptions of cardiology among US internal medicine trainees: factors influencing cardiology career choice. JAMA Cardiol 2018;3:682–691.
10. Lo Sasso AT, Richards MR, Chou CF, et al. The $16,819 pay gap for newly trained physicians: the unexplained trend of men earning more than women. Health Aff Proj Hope 2011;30:193–201.
11. Jena AB, Olenski AR, Blumenthal DM. Sex differences in physician salary in US public medical schools. JAMA Intern Med 2016;176:1294–1304.
12. Silver JK. Understanding and addressing gender equity for women in neurology. Neurology 2019;93:538–549.
13. Morgan AU, Chaiyachati KH, Weissman GE, et al. Eliminating gender-based bias in academic medicine: more than naming the “elephant in the room”. J Gen Intern Med 2018;33:966–968.
14. Fassiotto M, Hamel EO, Ku M, et al. Women in academic medicine: measuring stereotype threat among junior faculty. J Womens Health 2016;25:292–298.
15. Armenta BE. Stereotype boost and stereotype threat effects: the moderating role of ethnic identification. Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol 2010;16:94–98.
16. Salles A, Mueller CM, Cohen GL. Exploring the relationship between stereotypical beliefs and residents’ well-being. J Am Coll Surg 2016; 222:52–58.
17. Myers SP, Dasari M, Brown JB, et al. Effects of gender bias and stereotypes in surgical training. JAMA Surg 2020;155:552–560.
18. Bellini MI, Graham Y, Hayes C, et al. A woman’s place is in theatre: women’s perceptions and experiences of working in surgery from the Association of Surgeons of Great Britain and Ireland women in surgery working group. BMJ Open 2019;9:e024349.
19. Kramer M, Heyligers IC, Könings KD. Implicit gender-career bias in postgraduate medical training still exists, mainly in residents and in females. BMC Med Educ 2021;21:253.
20. Salles A, Awad M, Goldin L, et al. Estimating implicit and explicit gender bias among health care professionals and surgeons. JAMA Netw Open 2019;2:e196545.
21. Webster F, Rice K, Christian J, et al. The erasure of gender in academic surgery: a qualitative study. Am J Surg 2016;212:559–565.
22. Gorman EH. Gender stereotypes, same-gender preferences, and organizational variation in the hiring of women: evidence from law firms. Am Sociol Rev 2005;70:702–728.
23. Crisp RJ, Bache LM, Maitner AT. Dynamics of social comparison in counter-stereotypic domains: stereotype boost, not stereotype threat, for women engineering majors. Soc Influence 2009;4:171–184.
24. Wald E. Glass ceilings and dead ends: professional ideologies, gender stereotypes, and the future of women lawyers at large law firms. https:// papers.ssrn.com/abstract=1574446. Published March 18, 2010. Accessed August 3, 2022.
25. Angus C. Gender stereotype and its consequences on female managers. IDOSR J Appl Sci 2020;5:14–20.
28. Gender equality in medicine: change is coming. Lancet Gastroenterol Hepatol 2019;4:893.
29. Bhatia K, Takayesu JK, Arbelaez C, et al. An innovative educational and mentorship program for emergency medicine women residents to enhance academic development and retention. CJEM 2015;17:685–688.
30. Natsuhara KH, Borno HT. The distance between us: the COVID-19 pandemic’s effects on burnout among resident physicians. Med Sci Educ 2021;31:2065–2069.
31. Rochon PA, Davidoff F, Levinson W. Women in academic medicine leadership: has anything changed in 25 years? Acad Med 2016;91:1053–1056.
32. Aronson J, Fried CB, Good C. Reducing the effects of stereotype threat on African American college students by shaping theories of intelligence. J Exp Soc Psychol 2002;38:113–125.
33. Murphy MC, Steele CM, Gross JJ. Signaling threat: how situational cues affect women in math, science, and engineering settings. Psychol Sci 2007;18:879–885.
34. Beeler WH, Mangurian C, Jagsi R. Unplugging the pipeline—a call for term limits in academic medicine. N Engl J Med 2019;381:1508–1511.
35. Busari JO, Verhagen EA, Muskiet FD. The influence of the cultural climate of the training environment on physicians’ self-perception of competence and preparedness for practice. BMC Med Educ 2008;8:51.
36. Barnes KL, McGuire L, Dunivan G, et al. Gender bias experiences of female surgical trainees. J Surg Educ 2019;76:e1–e14.
37. Razack S, Philibert I. Inclusion in the clinical learning environment: building the conditions for diverse human flourishing. Med Teach 2019;41:380–384.
38. Tsugawa Y, Jena AB, Figueroa JF, et al. Comparison of hospital mortality and readmission rates for Medicare patients treated by male vs female physicians. JAMA Intern Med 2017;177:206–213.
.
39. Wallis CJ, Ravi B, Coburn N, et al. Comparison of postoperative outcomes among patients treated by male and female surgeons: a population based matched cohort study. BMJ 2017;359:j4366.