Gender, racial, and ethnic representation of cardiology fellows in the United States, 2014-2020: An underwhelming pace of diversification worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

8-1-2022

Publication Title

Journal of the National Medical Association

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Cardiologists serve a diverse population of patients, yet the lack of diversity within the cardiology workforce has continued to persist and does not represent the composition of the patient population in the United States. Although medical schools and internal medicine residency programs have witnessed major improvements in diversity, the field of cardiology has not emulated these patterns.

METHODS: Gender, race, and ethnicity data from the graduate medical education supplements published annually in the Journal of the American Medical Association from 2014 through 2020 were analyzed. The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the recruitment of female trainees in cardiology was also investigated.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Women represented 24.6% of cardiology trainees in the year 2020, which is a minor increase from 21.2% in 2014. The percentage of Hispanic trainees has slightly decreased from 6.90% in 2014 to 6.26% in 2020, while the percentage of Black trainees has only increased from 5.45% in 2014 to 5.50% in 2020. The data demonstrate a clear disparity and a desperate need for diversification of the cardiology trainee workforce. The COVID-19 pandemic may also exacerbate this lack of diversity in upcoming years due to the reemergence of inequities in social responsibilities between male and female trainees.

IMPLICATIONS: Strong action must be taken on an institutional level to shift the culture in cardiology to one that is more appealing to women and underrepresented minorities in order to better serve an increasingly diverse population.

Volume

114

Issue

4

First Page

451

Last Page

455

DOI

10.1016/j.jnma.2022.05.010

ISSN

1943-4693

PubMed ID

35688693

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