Retrospective study of the differences in patient characteristics and revenue between male and female surgeons in Taiwan

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作者
Weiming Cheng
Shu-Yi Lin
Yu-Hua Fan
Sheng-Wen Chen
机构
[1] Taipei City Hospital,Division of Urology, Department of Surgery
[2] Zhongxiao Branch,Department of Education and Research
[3] Taipei City Hospital,Department of Urology
[4] Taipei Veterans General Hospital,Program in Molecular Medicine, School of Life Sciences
[5] National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University,Institute of Biopharmaceutical Science, School of Life Science
[6] National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University,Department of Urology, Faculty of Medicine
[7] National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University,undefined
[8] Urological Center,undefined
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Surgery is traditionally a male-dominated field, and gender differences exist despite the growing numbers of female surgeons. A handful of studies have evaluated the condition in Asian societies. We aimed to examine the difference between female and male surgeons in urology, general surgery, and gynecology by analyzing a nationwide, population-based database. We identified surgeons with a clinical experience of six to thirteen years between 1995 to 2013 from the National Health Insurance Research Database. We collected patient numbers and revenue per month in outpatient and inpatient care, as well as monthly numbers of surgeries conducted by female and male surgeons in urology, general surgery, and gynecology, for analysis. Original student’s t-test and wilcoxon rank sum test was used to compare the differences between female and male surgeons, and p values less than 0.05 were considered statistically significant. Female urologists and general surgeons had a significantly higher ratio of female patients in Taiwan. Female urologists had patient numbers, revenues, and numbers of surgeries comparable to male urologists. In contrast, female general surgeons had significantly less involvement in outpatient and inpatient care and had low monthly revenues. Female general surgeons contradictorily performed more oncological surgeries per month than males. However, the difference in numbers of oncological surgeries was not significant after excluding breast cancer surgeries. Female gynecologists had a similar amount of outpatients and outpatient revenue but significantly less inpatient care and numbers of surgeries per month. A gender-based gap exists among surgeons in Taiwan. The gap between females and males appeared narrower in urology than in general surgery and gynecology. Management of diseases related to female sex organs, including breast, were more common among female surgeons. Efforts should be made to decrease gender stereotypes, to ensure that patients receive the best care regardless of the sex of the surgeons.
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