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Scholar Results 1 - 10 of about 101 related to Levinson: When most doctors are women: what lies ahead?. (0.12 sec) 

When most doctors are women: what lies ahead?

- annals.org [PDF] 
W Levinson, N Lurie - Annals of internal medicine, 2004 - Am Coll Physicians
The profession of medicine is becoming feminized: The number of women enrolled in medical
school and residency programs has increased dramatically over the past several decades. Some
re- searchers have examined how women are faring in the profession, but few have ...
Cited by 59 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 12 versions

A force to contend with: the gender gap closes in Canadian medical schools


KR Burton, IK Wong - Canadian Medical Association Journal, 2004 - ecmaj.ca
Increasing numbers of women are entering medicine. In 1959, women accounted for 6% of medical
school graduates, compared with 44% in 1989. 1 The most recent data from the Canadian Resident
Matching Service (CaRMS) 2 demonstrate that women have gained equity in numbers in ...
Cited by 26 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 13 versions

The feminization of the medical work force, implications for Scottish primary care: a …


B McKinstry, I Colthart, K Elliott, C … - BMC Health Services …, 2006 - biomedcentral.com
The number of women working in general practice internationally has been steadily rising. In
Scotland there have been concerns that such a change may lead to increased part-time working
and subsequently to a fall in available general practice manpower despite an apparently ...
Cited by 20 - Related articles - Cached - All 5 versions

Gender awareness among physicians – the effect of specialty and gender. A study …


G Risberg, K Hamberg, EE Johansson - BMC Medical Education, 2003 - biomedcentral.com
Questionnaires were sent to all 468 specialists in the clinical departments and in family
medicine, who were engaged in educating medical students at a Swedish university. They were
asked to rate, on visual analogue scales, the importance of physician and patient gender ...
Cited by 20 - Related articles - Cached - All 10 versions

Reasons for considering leaving UK medicine: questionnaire study of junior …

- bmj.com [PDF] 
PJ Moss, TW Lambert, MJ Goldacre, P Lee - British Medical Journal, 2004 - bmj.com
An increase in the number of doctors working in the NHS in England is a major policy initiative
in the NHS Plan.1 ... “improving working lives” programme aims to ensure that everything is
done to encourage doctors, once recruited, to remain in the NHS.2 3 Although loss of ...
Cited by 21 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 12 versions

Towards gender balance: but will women physicians have an impact on medicine?


E Riska - Social Science & Medicine, 2001 - Elsevier
The increasing numbers of women in medicine in western societies has raised the issue about
their impact on medical practice. As a way of addressing the issue, this paper explores women's
position in medicine in the Nordic countries, where the medical profession will soon be ...
Cited by 63 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 4 versions

Recruiting physicians and long-term viability: perspectives of physicians and …


RW Hankins, L Guo, LA Bentley - Journal of health care finance, 2002 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
As outcome measures become more informative, staffing by high quality physicians becomes
more important to the competitive position of care providers. Success in physician recruiting
is, therefore, a key to the long-term success and viability of care providers. Perceived ...
Cited by 3 - Related articles - BL Direct

Women doctors in Norway: the challenging balance between career and family life


E Gjerberg - Social Science & Medicine, 2003 - Elsevier
In most Western countries, women doctors are still underrepresented in the higher positions
in the medical hierarchy and in the most prestigious specialities. A crucial question is whether
family responsibilities affect female and male career differently. The article examines how ...
Cited by 25 - Related articles - All 4 versions

The feminization of medicine and population health


SP Phillips, EB Austin - JAMA, 2009 - Am Med Assoc
Over the past century, women have moved from near exclusion from medical schools toward
forming the majority of new graduates in medicine, a trend referred to as "the feminization of
medicine." 1 While eliminating barriers to entry is a matter of equity and fairness, it has ...
Cited by 4 - Related articles - All 2 versions

Senior women physicians: the question of retirement.


AJ Batchelor - New York state journal of medicine, 1990 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Little is known about women physicians in their senior years. This paper describes a cross-sectional
survey of 21 women physicians ranging in age from 59 to 95 years in eight different medical
fields. The survey showed that 14 (66.7%) worked after age 65, including four who ...
Cited by 4 - Related articles - All 2 versions


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