Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/22788
Title: A quantitative study of race and gender representation within London medical school leadership
Authors: Hoque, S
Baker, EH
Milner, A
Keywords: race;women;leadership representation;medical schools
Issue Date: 27-May-2021
Publisher: International Journal of Medical Education
Citation: Hoque, S., Baker, E.H. and Milner, A. (2021) 'A quantitative study of race and gender representation within London medical school leadership', International Journal of Medical Education, 12, pp. 94 - 100. doi: 10.5116/ijme.609d.4db0.
Abstract: © 2021 Sophie Hoque et al. Objectives: To explore potential disparities in representation of Racially Minoritised (RM) persons and women in leadership roles in London Medical Schools compared to their RM and female student populations. Methods: General Medical Council's Medical School Annual Return 2017-18 data and official leadership team webpages were used to determine percentages of RM and female students and percentages of RM and women leaders in London medical schools. Student and leadership team percentages were then compared using chi-squared tests to assess statistically significant differences. Results: The percentage of RM persons filling leadership roles in London medical schools combined was statistically significantly less than the percentage of RM persons that compose the combined student body (8.6% (N=81) versus 60.2% (N=8786, χ2(1, N=8,867)=88.83, p<0.001). There was no statistically significant difference between the percentage of women filling leadership roles and the percentage of women in the combined student body (43.4% (N = 83) versus 52.5% (N=9026, χ2(1, N=9,109) =2.85, p=0.0913). Conclusions: Results mirror the underrepresentation of RM persons in leadership positions throughout the National Health Service (NHS) and in higher education but reflect the improved representation of women in leadership positions seen at the NHS board level. Greater effort is necessary to rectify RM representation within London medical school leadership teams. This is especially imperative given that racially similar role models for RM students are an important predictor in determining academic and future success.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/22788
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5116/ijme.609d.4db0
Appears in Collections:Dept of Life Sciences Research Papers

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