- ►rsmjournals.com K Bloor, N Freemantle, A Maynard - JRSM, 2008 - jrsm.rsmjournals.com Add to CiteULike Add to Complore Add to Connotea Add to Del.icio.us Add to Digg
Add to Reddit Add to Technorati What's this? ... Objective To explore whether
or not gender predicts consultant activity rates. Cited by 10 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 12 versions
J Dacre - British Medical Journal, 2008 - bmj.com Women are also not represented equally across the profession, with specialties
requiring more acute and on call responsibilities and more technical skills
seeming less attractive. 11 Women's performance in examinations in our ... Cited by 9 - Related articles - All 4 versions
B McKinstry - British Medical Journal, 2008 - bmj.com Over the past 30 years the proportion of women attending medical schools has
steadily risen in many countries including the UK, US, Canada, and Australia. 1
2 In 2002-3, all UK medical schools had more female students than male, ... Cited by 14 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 4 versions
J Firth-Cozens - British Medical Journal, 2008 - pmj.bmj.com The National Clinical Assessment Service (NCAS), an NHS organisation that
assesses doctors and dentists referred to them because of perceived
difficulties, has produced a report describing data arising from its first ... Cited by 3 - Related articles - All 5 versions
S Kilminster, J Downes, B Gough, D Murdoch- … - MEDICAL EDUCATION-OXFORD-, 2007 - 万方数据资源系统 BACKGROUND: Internationally, there are increasing numbers of women entering
medicine. Although all countries have different health care systems and social
contexts, all still show horizontal (women concentrated in certain areas of ... Cited by 19 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 4 versions
J Grant, H Jones, T Lambert, 2002 - oro.open.ac.uk This report, commissioned by the Department of Health, looks at the level of
applications to study medicine. Using publicly available statistical data the
report investigates both past and current application levels and underlying ... Cited by 10 - Related articles - Cached
J Archer - training, 2005 - jrsm.rsmjournals.com Measuring productivity Bloor et al.1 report that men have significantly higher
activity rates than women after accounting for age, specialty and Trust (JRSM
2008;101:27–33). No account is taken of the varying number of sessions ... Related articles - View as HTML - All 6 versions