Gender and workforce in urology - use of the BG index to assess female career promotion in academic urology

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Gender and workforce in urology - use of the BG index to assess female career promotion in academic urology. / Jaque, Jenny; Wanke, Eileen M; Müller, Ruth; Bauer, Jan; Ohlendorf, Daniela; Mache, Stefanie; Klingelhöfer, Doris; Quarcoo, David.

in: UROL J, Jahrgang 17, Nr. 1, 26.01.2020, S. 86-90.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Jaque, J, Wanke, EM, Müller, R, Bauer, J, Ohlendorf, D, Mache, S, Klingelhöfer, D & Quarcoo, D 2020, 'Gender and workforce in urology - use of the BG index to assess female career promotion in academic urology', UROL J, Jg. 17, Nr. 1, S. 86-90. https://doi.org/10.22037/uj.v0i0.4116

APA

Jaque, J., Wanke, E. M., Müller, R., Bauer, J., Ohlendorf, D., Mache, S., Klingelhöfer, D., & Quarcoo, D. (2020). Gender and workforce in urology - use of the BG index to assess female career promotion in academic urology. UROL J, 17(1), 86-90. https://doi.org/10.22037/uj.v0i0.4116

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{3f18b40395404d828c3cb460fa9e4bde,
title = "Gender and workforce in urology - use of the BG index to assess female career promotion in academic urology",
abstract = "PURPOSE: Today, the majority of medical graduates in countries such as the UK, the US or Germany are female. This poses a major problem for workforce planning especially in urology. We here use first the first time the previously established Br{\"u}ggmann Groneberg (BG) index to assess if female academic career options advance in urology.METHODS: Different operating parameters (student population, urology specialist population, urology chair female:male (f:m) ratio) were collected from the Federal Office of Statistics, the Federal Chamber of Physicians and the medical faculties of 36 German universities. Four time points were monitored (2000, 2005, 2010 and 2015). From these data, female to male (f:m) ratios and the recently established career advancement (BG) index have been calculated.RESULTS: The German hospital urology specialists' f:m ratios were 0.257 (499 female vs. 1944 male) for 2015, 0.195 for 2010, 0.133 for 2005 and 0.12 for 2000. The career advancement (BG) index was 0.0007 for 2000, 0,0005 for 2005, 0.094 for 2010 and 0.073 for 2015. The decrease from 2010 to 2015 was due to an increase in the f:m ratio of hospital urologists and female medical students.CONCLUSION: The BG index clearly illustrated that there is an urgent need for special academic career funding programs to counteract gender problems in urology. The BG index has been shown to be an excellent tool to assess female academic career options and will be very helpful to assess and document positive or negative changes in the next decades.",
author = "Jenny Jaque and Wanke, {Eileen M} and Ruth M{\"u}ller and Jan Bauer and Daniela Ohlendorf and Stefanie Mache and Doris Klingelh{\"o}fer and David Quarcoo",
year = "2020",
month = jan,
day = "26",
doi = "10.22037/uj.v0i0.4116",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "86--90",
journal = "UROL J",
issn = "1735-1308",
publisher = "Urology and Nephrology Research Center",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gender and workforce in urology - use of the BG index to assess female career promotion in academic urology

AU - Jaque, Jenny

AU - Wanke, Eileen M

AU - Müller, Ruth

AU - Bauer, Jan

AU - Ohlendorf, Daniela

AU - Mache, Stefanie

AU - Klingelhöfer, Doris

AU - Quarcoo, David

PY - 2020/1/26

Y1 - 2020/1/26

N2 - PURPOSE: Today, the majority of medical graduates in countries such as the UK, the US or Germany are female. This poses a major problem for workforce planning especially in urology. We here use first the first time the previously established Brüggmann Groneberg (BG) index to assess if female academic career options advance in urology.METHODS: Different operating parameters (student population, urology specialist population, urology chair female:male (f:m) ratio) were collected from the Federal Office of Statistics, the Federal Chamber of Physicians and the medical faculties of 36 German universities. Four time points were monitored (2000, 2005, 2010 and 2015). From these data, female to male (f:m) ratios and the recently established career advancement (BG) index have been calculated.RESULTS: The German hospital urology specialists' f:m ratios were 0.257 (499 female vs. 1944 male) for 2015, 0.195 for 2010, 0.133 for 2005 and 0.12 for 2000. The career advancement (BG) index was 0.0007 for 2000, 0,0005 for 2005, 0.094 for 2010 and 0.073 for 2015. The decrease from 2010 to 2015 was due to an increase in the f:m ratio of hospital urologists and female medical students.CONCLUSION: The BG index clearly illustrated that there is an urgent need for special academic career funding programs to counteract gender problems in urology. The BG index has been shown to be an excellent tool to assess female academic career options and will be very helpful to assess and document positive or negative changes in the next decades.

AB - PURPOSE: Today, the majority of medical graduates in countries such as the UK, the US or Germany are female. This poses a major problem for workforce planning especially in urology. We here use first the first time the previously established Brüggmann Groneberg (BG) index to assess if female academic career options advance in urology.METHODS: Different operating parameters (student population, urology specialist population, urology chair female:male (f:m) ratio) were collected from the Federal Office of Statistics, the Federal Chamber of Physicians and the medical faculties of 36 German universities. Four time points were monitored (2000, 2005, 2010 and 2015). From these data, female to male (f:m) ratios and the recently established career advancement (BG) index have been calculated.RESULTS: The German hospital urology specialists' f:m ratios were 0.257 (499 female vs. 1944 male) for 2015, 0.195 for 2010, 0.133 for 2005 and 0.12 for 2000. The career advancement (BG) index was 0.0007 for 2000, 0,0005 for 2005, 0.094 for 2010 and 0.073 for 2015. The decrease from 2010 to 2015 was due to an increase in the f:m ratio of hospital urologists and female medical students.CONCLUSION: The BG index clearly illustrated that there is an urgent need for special academic career funding programs to counteract gender problems in urology. The BG index has been shown to be an excellent tool to assess female academic career options and will be very helpful to assess and document positive or negative changes in the next decades.

U2 - 10.22037/uj.v0i0.4116

DO - 10.22037/uj.v0i0.4116

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 31836999

VL - 17

SP - 86

EP - 90

JO - UROL J

JF - UROL J

SN - 1735-1308

IS - 1

ER -