Exploring the gender gap: Letters of recommendation to pediatric surgery fellowship

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Am J Surg (Hoffman A, Ghoubrial R, McCormick M, Matemavi P, Cusick R. - curated by SCHCP) Published:

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Am J Surg (Hoffman A, Ghoubrial R, McCormick M, Matemavi P, Cusick R. - curated by SCHCP)

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Background: Letters of recommendation (LoR) are considered one of the most important predictors of matching into a pediatric surgery fellowship. We determined if gendered differences exist in LoR written for resident candidates.

Methods: A retrospective review of blinded LoR to a fellowship program between 2015 and 2017 was performed.

Results: Of the 364 LoR reviewed for 49 female and 48 male applicants, male surgeons wrote 82.5% of letters. Male LoR contained more agentic terms (p = 0. 042), first name occurrences (p = 0.0082) and phrase "future success" (p = 0.015). Female letters included more socio-communal phrases (p = 0. 010) and 5% referenced a spouse's accomplishments vs. 0% of male letters. Male LoR contained more active possessive language (p-0. 027); ie: "he published", "he presented". We found no difference in an applicant's research experience (p = 0.06) or leadership qualities (p = 0. 067).

Conclusion: Gender differences exist in LoR written for fellowship applicants applying to a highly competitive subspecialty.

DOI: 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2019.08.005

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