Although approximately 50% of medical school graduates today are women, female physicians tend to be underrepresented in senior positions, make less money than their male counterparts and receive fewer promotions. There is a growing body of literature demonstrating gender bias in various forms of evaluation in medicine, but this work was mainly conducted by looking for specific words using fixed dictionaries such as LIWC and focused on recommendation letters. We use a dataset of written and quantitative assessments of medical student performance on individual shifts of work, collected across multiple institutions, to investigate the extent to which gender bias exists in a day-to-day context for medical students. We investigate differences in the narrative comments given to male and female students by both male or female faculty assessors, using a fine-tuned BERT model. This allows us to examine whether groups are written about in systematically different ways, without relying on hand-crafted wordlists or topic models. We compare these results to results from the traditional LIWC method and find that, although we find no evidence of group-level gender bias in this dataset, terms related to family and children are used more in feedback given to women.
翻译:尽管目前医学院毕业生中约有50%是妇女,但女医生往往在高级职位上代表性不足,收入低于男医生,晋升较少;越来越多的文献表明医学方面各种形式的评价中存在性别偏见,但这项工作主要是通过使用LiWC等固定词典查找具体词句来进行的,重点是建议信;我们使用一套数据,对医科学生个人轮班工作业绩进行书面和定量评估,收集到多个机构,以调查医科学生日常工作中存在性别偏见的程度;我们调查男女教师评估员对男女学生的叙述性评论的差异,使用经微调的BERT模型,使我们能够审查是否以系统不同的方式编写团体,而不必依赖手写词单或专题模型;我们将这些结果与传统的LIWC方法的结果进行比较,发现尽管我们没有发现任何证据,在这种数据集中,与家庭和儿童有关的术语在向妇女提供的反馈中被更多地使用。