Background:Women are underrepresented in the anesthesiology physician workforce. Additionally, recruitment of women into the specialty has been stagnant over the past 2 decades. Current evidence is lacking regarding how and why women navigate the career-exploration journey to find anesthesiology. The purpose of this study was to investigate the phenomenon of women choosing a career in anesthesiology, specifically identifying facilitators and barriers to career choice and professional identity formation.
Methods:Using constructivist grounded theory, we explored the self-reported experiences of women anesthesiology trainees, including resident physicians and senior medical students. Seven resident physicians and 4 medical students participated in the study. Through semistructured interviews, data collection, and iterative analysis, the authors identified codes and emerging themes, thereby advancing the understanding of the career-choice journeys of women anesthesiologists.
Results:Iterative analysis revealed 6 themes related to career-choice journeys for women in anesthesiology. Three emerging themes have been previously described in career-choice reviews (specialty characteristics, gender awareness, and pathway support). Additionally, 3 novel themes emerged from our study population (hidden curriculum, learning environment, and mystery behind the drape).
Conclusions:The findings of this study highlight factors and experiences that impact career-choice decisions for women who choose anesthesiology. Only in understanding the how and why of women physicians' journeys can we hope to build on this knowledge, thereby striving to develop educational, clinical, professional, and personal experiences that support women along their professional journeys to ultimately find anesthesiology.
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