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Women reach for the top in ob.gyn.

Dr. Gloria E. Sarto was one of just six women in her medical school graduating class of 76 in 1958 – a time when many medical schools, she recalled, had quota systems for women and minorities. Later, she became the first female ob.gyn. resident at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

“When I was interviewing for a residency position, the department chair told me ‘I’m going to treat you like one of the boys,’” the 86-year-old professor emeritus said. “And I said, ‘If you do that, it will be just fine.’”

 

Courtesy of the University of Wisconsin, Madison
Dr. Gloria E. Sarto

Yet she still had to lobby sometimes for equal treatment – convincing the department chief in one instance that sleeping on a delivery table during hospital duty because there weren’t any rooms for women was not being treated “like one of the boys.” And she was often bothered by her observation that, in general, “the women [residents] weren’t noticed... they weren’t being recognized.”

Dr. Sarto has since chaired two ob.gyn. departments and was the first woman president of the American Gynecological and Obstetrical Society. Today, however, as she continues mentoring junior faculty and works to ensure the smooth succession of programs she founded, she sees a much different field – one in which women not only command more respect but where they make up a majority of ob.gyns.

Impact on women’s health

In 2014, 62% of all ob.gyns. were women (Obstet Gynecol. 2016 Jan;127[1]:148-52). The majority has been years in the making; more women than men have been entering the specialty since 1993. And if current trends continue, the percentage of women active in the specialty will only increase further. In 2010, women comprised more than 80% of all ob.gyn. residents/fellows, more than any other specialty, according to data from the Association of American Medical Colleges.

Such numerical strength is significant, but for Dr. Sarto and other leaders in the specialty who spoke about their experiences as female ob.gyns., it’s the impact that women physicians have had on women’s health that’s most important.

Dr. Sarto helped to start Lamaze classes in a hospital basement amidst widespread opposition from the male-dominated leadership and staff who felt that women didn’t need such help with labor. She also takes pride in her collaboration with Dr. Florence Haseltine, Phyllis Greenberger, and several other women to address biases in biomedical research. Their work with Congress led to a federal audit of National Institutes of Health policies and practices.

“We knew that when that report came out [in 1990], it would hit every newspaper in the country,” Dr. Sarto said. It just about did, and soon after that, the NIH Office of Research on Women’s Health was established to ensure that women were included in clinical trials and that gaps in knowledge of women’s health were addressed.

 

Dr. Barbara Levy

Dr. Barbara Levy, who left a private practice and two medical directorships in 2012 to become Vice President for Health Policy at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, recalls feeling early in her career that women’s health needed to be approached much more holistically.

“What I was seeing and experiencing didn’t match the textbooks,” she said. “The connection, for instance, between chronic pelvic pain and women who’d been victims of sexual abuse – there wasn’t anything in the literature. I’d see women with the same kinds of physical characteristics on their exams... and patients were willing to share with me things that they wouldn’t have been willing to share with my colleagues.”

Dr. Levy graduated from Princeton University in 1974 with the second class of admitted women, and after a year off, went west for medical school. She graduated in 1979 from the University of California, San Diego, with nine other women in a class of 110.

Her desire to care for the “whole patient” had her leaning toward family medicine until a beloved mentor, Dr. Donna Brooks, “reminded me that there were so few women to take care of women... and that as an ob.gyn. I could follow women through pregnancy, delivery, surgeries, hormone issues, and so many [other facets of their health].”

Dr. Levy, who served as president of the American Association of Gynecologic Laparoscopists in 1995, recalls a world “that was very tolerant of sexual harassment” and remembers the energy she needed to expend to be taken seriously and to correct unconscious bias.

When she applied for fellowship in the American College of Surgeons in the late 1980s, the committee members who conducted an interview “told me right away that I couldn’t expect to be a fellow if I hadn’t done my duty [serving on hospital committees],” Dr. Levy said.

 

 

“I told them I had volunteered for more than three committees every single year I’d been on staff, and had never been asked to serve,” she said. “They had no idea. Their assumption was that I had children at home and I wasn’t taking the time.”

Entering leadership

When it comes to leadership, a look at academic medicine suggests that women ob.gyns. have made significant strides. In 2013, compared with other major specialties, obstetrics and gynecology had the highest proportion of department leaders who were women. Yet the picture is mixed. According to an analysis published earlier in 2016, women in ob.gyn. and nine other major specialties “were not represented in the proportions in which they entered their fields” (Obstet Gynecol. 2016 Mar;127[3]:442-7).

Women comprised 57% of all faculty in departments of ob.gyn. in 2013. And, according to the analysis, they comprised 62% of ob.gyn. residency program directors, 30% of division directors, and 24% of department chairs.

The high numbers of women serving as residency program directors raises concern because such positions “do not result in advancement in the same way,” said Dr. Levy, adding that women have excelled in such positions and may desire them, but should be mentored early on about what tracks have the potential for upper-level leadership roles.

 

Courtesy Women & Infants Hospital
Dr. Maureen Phipps

Dr. Maureen Phipps, who in 2013 was appointed as chair of ob.gyn. and assistant dean in the Warren Albert Medical School of Brown University in Providence, said she carries with her the fact that women are not yet proportionally represented at the upper levels. “I know that my being in this position and in other positions I’ve held is important for women to see,” she said.

Dr. Phipps graduated from the University of Vermont’s College of Medicine in 1994 as a part of a class in which men and women were fairly evenly represented. In addition to her role as department chair and assistant dean, she is also now chief of ob.gyn. at Women & Infants Hospital of Rhode Island, where she did her residency, and executive chief of ob.gyn for the Care New England Health System.

“I’ve had amazing male leaders and mentors in my career – the people who’ve gone to bat for me have been men,” said Dr. Phipps. Yet, “it’s important to have women in leadership... It’s known that we think differently and approach things differently. Having balance and a variety of different lenses will allow us to [further] grow the field.”

Gender pay gap

Both in academic medicine and in practice, a gender pay gap still reportedly affects women physicians across the board. Various reports and analyses have shown women earning disproportionately less than their male colleagues in similar positions.

Notably, a 2011 analysis in Health Affairs found a nearly $17,000 gap between the starting salaries for men and women physicians. This differential accounted for variables such as patient care hours, practice type, and location. It is possible, the study authors reported, that practices “may now be offering greater flexibility and family-friendly attributes that are more appealing but that come at the price of commensurately lower pay” (Health Aff. 2011:30;193-201).

The American Medical Women’s Association, which promotes advocacy on a gender pay gap, said in a statement about the study, however, that “gender discrimination still exists within the echelons of medicine, and gender stereotyping frequently leads to the devaluation of women physicians.”

From her perspective, Dr. Levy said it’s “complicated” to tease apart and understand all the factors that may be involved.

The challenges of balancing work and family/caregiving and are “still really tough” for women ob.gyns., she said, especially those who want to practice obstetrics. Dr. Levy said she gave up obstetrics when it became apparent that she and her husband would need to hire an additional child care provider.

While the hospitalist-laborist model has been a valuable addition to obstetrics, Dr. Phipps said, “it’s our challenge to continue to think creatively about how we can keep clinicians engaged when they’re in the earlier parts of their careers and challenged by family responsibilities and other commitments.”

Both she and Dr. Levy emphasized their concerns about burnout and their desire to keep career satisfaction high – especially now that women are such a big part of ob.gyn. – and both spoke of the importance of making time for whatever activities help women “recharge.”

“We should be doing what we’re doing because we love it,” Dr. Levy said. “We should focus on that every day. Our patients trust us. We need to remind ourselves of what incredible connections we have.”

 

 

Throughout 2016, Ob.Gyn. News will celebrate its 50th anniversary with exclusive articles looking at the evolution of the specialty, including the history of contraception, changes in gynecologic surgery, and the transformation of the well-woman visit. Look for these articles and more special features in the pages of Ob.Gyn. News and online at obgynnews.com.

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Dr. Gloria E. Sarto was one of just six women in her medical school graduating class of 76 in 1958 – a time when many medical schools, she recalled, had quota systems for women and minorities. Later, she became the first female ob.gyn. resident at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

“When I was interviewing for a residency position, the department chair told me ‘I’m going to treat you like one of the boys,’” the 86-year-old professor emeritus said. “And I said, ‘If you do that, it will be just fine.’”

 

Courtesy of the University of Wisconsin, Madison
Dr. Gloria E. Sarto

Yet she still had to lobby sometimes for equal treatment – convincing the department chief in one instance that sleeping on a delivery table during hospital duty because there weren’t any rooms for women was not being treated “like one of the boys.” And she was often bothered by her observation that, in general, “the women [residents] weren’t noticed... they weren’t being recognized.”

Dr. Sarto has since chaired two ob.gyn. departments and was the first woman president of the American Gynecological and Obstetrical Society. Today, however, as she continues mentoring junior faculty and works to ensure the smooth succession of programs she founded, she sees a much different field – one in which women not only command more respect but where they make up a majority of ob.gyns.

Impact on women’s health

In 2014, 62% of all ob.gyns. were women (Obstet Gynecol. 2016 Jan;127[1]:148-52). The majority has been years in the making; more women than men have been entering the specialty since 1993. And if current trends continue, the percentage of women active in the specialty will only increase further. In 2010, women comprised more than 80% of all ob.gyn. residents/fellows, more than any other specialty, according to data from the Association of American Medical Colleges.

Such numerical strength is significant, but for Dr. Sarto and other leaders in the specialty who spoke about their experiences as female ob.gyns., it’s the impact that women physicians have had on women’s health that’s most important.

Dr. Sarto helped to start Lamaze classes in a hospital basement amidst widespread opposition from the male-dominated leadership and staff who felt that women didn’t need such help with labor. She also takes pride in her collaboration with Dr. Florence Haseltine, Phyllis Greenberger, and several other women to address biases in biomedical research. Their work with Congress led to a federal audit of National Institutes of Health policies and practices.

“We knew that when that report came out [in 1990], it would hit every newspaper in the country,” Dr. Sarto said. It just about did, and soon after that, the NIH Office of Research on Women’s Health was established to ensure that women were included in clinical trials and that gaps in knowledge of women’s health were addressed.

 

Dr. Barbara Levy

Dr. Barbara Levy, who left a private practice and two medical directorships in 2012 to become Vice President for Health Policy at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, recalls feeling early in her career that women’s health needed to be approached much more holistically.

“What I was seeing and experiencing didn’t match the textbooks,” she said. “The connection, for instance, between chronic pelvic pain and women who’d been victims of sexual abuse – there wasn’t anything in the literature. I’d see women with the same kinds of physical characteristics on their exams... and patients were willing to share with me things that they wouldn’t have been willing to share with my colleagues.”

Dr. Levy graduated from Princeton University in 1974 with the second class of admitted women, and after a year off, went west for medical school. She graduated in 1979 from the University of California, San Diego, with nine other women in a class of 110.

Her desire to care for the “whole patient” had her leaning toward family medicine until a beloved mentor, Dr. Donna Brooks, “reminded me that there were so few women to take care of women... and that as an ob.gyn. I could follow women through pregnancy, delivery, surgeries, hormone issues, and so many [other facets of their health].”

Dr. Levy, who served as president of the American Association of Gynecologic Laparoscopists in 1995, recalls a world “that was very tolerant of sexual harassment” and remembers the energy she needed to expend to be taken seriously and to correct unconscious bias.

When she applied for fellowship in the American College of Surgeons in the late 1980s, the committee members who conducted an interview “told me right away that I couldn’t expect to be a fellow if I hadn’t done my duty [serving on hospital committees],” Dr. Levy said.

 

 

“I told them I had volunteered for more than three committees every single year I’d been on staff, and had never been asked to serve,” she said. “They had no idea. Their assumption was that I had children at home and I wasn’t taking the time.”

Entering leadership

When it comes to leadership, a look at academic medicine suggests that women ob.gyns. have made significant strides. In 2013, compared with other major specialties, obstetrics and gynecology had the highest proportion of department leaders who were women. Yet the picture is mixed. According to an analysis published earlier in 2016, women in ob.gyn. and nine other major specialties “were not represented in the proportions in which they entered their fields” (Obstet Gynecol. 2016 Mar;127[3]:442-7).

Women comprised 57% of all faculty in departments of ob.gyn. in 2013. And, according to the analysis, they comprised 62% of ob.gyn. residency program directors, 30% of division directors, and 24% of department chairs.

The high numbers of women serving as residency program directors raises concern because such positions “do not result in advancement in the same way,” said Dr. Levy, adding that women have excelled in such positions and may desire them, but should be mentored early on about what tracks have the potential for upper-level leadership roles.

 

Courtesy Women & Infants Hospital
Dr. Maureen Phipps

Dr. Maureen Phipps, who in 2013 was appointed as chair of ob.gyn. and assistant dean in the Warren Albert Medical School of Brown University in Providence, said she carries with her the fact that women are not yet proportionally represented at the upper levels. “I know that my being in this position and in other positions I’ve held is important for women to see,” she said.

Dr. Phipps graduated from the University of Vermont’s College of Medicine in 1994 as a part of a class in which men and women were fairly evenly represented. In addition to her role as department chair and assistant dean, she is also now chief of ob.gyn. at Women & Infants Hospital of Rhode Island, where she did her residency, and executive chief of ob.gyn for the Care New England Health System.

“I’ve had amazing male leaders and mentors in my career – the people who’ve gone to bat for me have been men,” said Dr. Phipps. Yet, “it’s important to have women in leadership... It’s known that we think differently and approach things differently. Having balance and a variety of different lenses will allow us to [further] grow the field.”

Gender pay gap

Both in academic medicine and in practice, a gender pay gap still reportedly affects women physicians across the board. Various reports and analyses have shown women earning disproportionately less than their male colleagues in similar positions.

Notably, a 2011 analysis in Health Affairs found a nearly $17,000 gap between the starting salaries for men and women physicians. This differential accounted for variables such as patient care hours, practice type, and location. It is possible, the study authors reported, that practices “may now be offering greater flexibility and family-friendly attributes that are more appealing but that come at the price of commensurately lower pay” (Health Aff. 2011:30;193-201).

The American Medical Women’s Association, which promotes advocacy on a gender pay gap, said in a statement about the study, however, that “gender discrimination still exists within the echelons of medicine, and gender stereotyping frequently leads to the devaluation of women physicians.”

From her perspective, Dr. Levy said it’s “complicated” to tease apart and understand all the factors that may be involved.

The challenges of balancing work and family/caregiving and are “still really tough” for women ob.gyns., she said, especially those who want to practice obstetrics. Dr. Levy said she gave up obstetrics when it became apparent that she and her husband would need to hire an additional child care provider.

While the hospitalist-laborist model has been a valuable addition to obstetrics, Dr. Phipps said, “it’s our challenge to continue to think creatively about how we can keep clinicians engaged when they’re in the earlier parts of their careers and challenged by family responsibilities and other commitments.”

Both she and Dr. Levy emphasized their concerns about burnout and their desire to keep career satisfaction high – especially now that women are such a big part of ob.gyn. – and both spoke of the importance of making time for whatever activities help women “recharge.”

“We should be doing what we’re doing because we love it,” Dr. Levy said. “We should focus on that every day. Our patients trust us. We need to remind ourselves of what incredible connections we have.”

 

 

Throughout 2016, Ob.Gyn. News will celebrate its 50th anniversary with exclusive articles looking at the evolution of the specialty, including the history of contraception, changes in gynecologic surgery, and the transformation of the well-woman visit. Look for these articles and more special features in the pages of Ob.Gyn. News and online at obgynnews.com.

Dr. Gloria E. Sarto was one of just six women in her medical school graduating class of 76 in 1958 – a time when many medical schools, she recalled, had quota systems for women and minorities. Later, she became the first female ob.gyn. resident at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

“When I was interviewing for a residency position, the department chair told me ‘I’m going to treat you like one of the boys,’” the 86-year-old professor emeritus said. “And I said, ‘If you do that, it will be just fine.’”

 

Courtesy of the University of Wisconsin, Madison
Dr. Gloria E. Sarto

Yet she still had to lobby sometimes for equal treatment – convincing the department chief in one instance that sleeping on a delivery table during hospital duty because there weren’t any rooms for women was not being treated “like one of the boys.” And she was often bothered by her observation that, in general, “the women [residents] weren’t noticed... they weren’t being recognized.”

Dr. Sarto has since chaired two ob.gyn. departments and was the first woman president of the American Gynecological and Obstetrical Society. Today, however, as she continues mentoring junior faculty and works to ensure the smooth succession of programs she founded, she sees a much different field – one in which women not only command more respect but where they make up a majority of ob.gyns.

Impact on women’s health

In 2014, 62% of all ob.gyns. were women (Obstet Gynecol. 2016 Jan;127[1]:148-52). The majority has been years in the making; more women than men have been entering the specialty since 1993. And if current trends continue, the percentage of women active in the specialty will only increase further. In 2010, women comprised more than 80% of all ob.gyn. residents/fellows, more than any other specialty, according to data from the Association of American Medical Colleges.

Such numerical strength is significant, but for Dr. Sarto and other leaders in the specialty who spoke about their experiences as female ob.gyns., it’s the impact that women physicians have had on women’s health that’s most important.

Dr. Sarto helped to start Lamaze classes in a hospital basement amidst widespread opposition from the male-dominated leadership and staff who felt that women didn’t need such help with labor. She also takes pride in her collaboration with Dr. Florence Haseltine, Phyllis Greenberger, and several other women to address biases in biomedical research. Their work with Congress led to a federal audit of National Institutes of Health policies and practices.

“We knew that when that report came out [in 1990], it would hit every newspaper in the country,” Dr. Sarto said. It just about did, and soon after that, the NIH Office of Research on Women’s Health was established to ensure that women were included in clinical trials and that gaps in knowledge of women’s health were addressed.

 

Dr. Barbara Levy

Dr. Barbara Levy, who left a private practice and two medical directorships in 2012 to become Vice President for Health Policy at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, recalls feeling early in her career that women’s health needed to be approached much more holistically.

“What I was seeing and experiencing didn’t match the textbooks,” she said. “The connection, for instance, between chronic pelvic pain and women who’d been victims of sexual abuse – there wasn’t anything in the literature. I’d see women with the same kinds of physical characteristics on their exams... and patients were willing to share with me things that they wouldn’t have been willing to share with my colleagues.”

Dr. Levy graduated from Princeton University in 1974 with the second class of admitted women, and after a year off, went west for medical school. She graduated in 1979 from the University of California, San Diego, with nine other women in a class of 110.

Her desire to care for the “whole patient” had her leaning toward family medicine until a beloved mentor, Dr. Donna Brooks, “reminded me that there were so few women to take care of women... and that as an ob.gyn. I could follow women through pregnancy, delivery, surgeries, hormone issues, and so many [other facets of their health].”

Dr. Levy, who served as president of the American Association of Gynecologic Laparoscopists in 1995, recalls a world “that was very tolerant of sexual harassment” and remembers the energy she needed to expend to be taken seriously and to correct unconscious bias.

When she applied for fellowship in the American College of Surgeons in the late 1980s, the committee members who conducted an interview “told me right away that I couldn’t expect to be a fellow if I hadn’t done my duty [serving on hospital committees],” Dr. Levy said.

 

 

“I told them I had volunteered for more than three committees every single year I’d been on staff, and had never been asked to serve,” she said. “They had no idea. Their assumption was that I had children at home and I wasn’t taking the time.”

Entering leadership

When it comes to leadership, a look at academic medicine suggests that women ob.gyns. have made significant strides. In 2013, compared with other major specialties, obstetrics and gynecology had the highest proportion of department leaders who were women. Yet the picture is mixed. According to an analysis published earlier in 2016, women in ob.gyn. and nine other major specialties “were not represented in the proportions in which they entered their fields” (Obstet Gynecol. 2016 Mar;127[3]:442-7).

Women comprised 57% of all faculty in departments of ob.gyn. in 2013. And, according to the analysis, they comprised 62% of ob.gyn. residency program directors, 30% of division directors, and 24% of department chairs.

The high numbers of women serving as residency program directors raises concern because such positions “do not result in advancement in the same way,” said Dr. Levy, adding that women have excelled in such positions and may desire them, but should be mentored early on about what tracks have the potential for upper-level leadership roles.

 

Courtesy Women & Infants Hospital
Dr. Maureen Phipps

Dr. Maureen Phipps, who in 2013 was appointed as chair of ob.gyn. and assistant dean in the Warren Albert Medical School of Brown University in Providence, said she carries with her the fact that women are not yet proportionally represented at the upper levels. “I know that my being in this position and in other positions I’ve held is important for women to see,” she said.

Dr. Phipps graduated from the University of Vermont’s College of Medicine in 1994 as a part of a class in which men and women were fairly evenly represented. In addition to her role as department chair and assistant dean, she is also now chief of ob.gyn. at Women & Infants Hospital of Rhode Island, where she did her residency, and executive chief of ob.gyn for the Care New England Health System.

“I’ve had amazing male leaders and mentors in my career – the people who’ve gone to bat for me have been men,” said Dr. Phipps. Yet, “it’s important to have women in leadership... It’s known that we think differently and approach things differently. Having balance and a variety of different lenses will allow us to [further] grow the field.”

Gender pay gap

Both in academic medicine and in practice, a gender pay gap still reportedly affects women physicians across the board. Various reports and analyses have shown women earning disproportionately less than their male colleagues in similar positions.

Notably, a 2011 analysis in Health Affairs found a nearly $17,000 gap between the starting salaries for men and women physicians. This differential accounted for variables such as patient care hours, practice type, and location. It is possible, the study authors reported, that practices “may now be offering greater flexibility and family-friendly attributes that are more appealing but that come at the price of commensurately lower pay” (Health Aff. 2011:30;193-201).

The American Medical Women’s Association, which promotes advocacy on a gender pay gap, said in a statement about the study, however, that “gender discrimination still exists within the echelons of medicine, and gender stereotyping frequently leads to the devaluation of women physicians.”

From her perspective, Dr. Levy said it’s “complicated” to tease apart and understand all the factors that may be involved.

The challenges of balancing work and family/caregiving and are “still really tough” for women ob.gyns., she said, especially those who want to practice obstetrics. Dr. Levy said she gave up obstetrics when it became apparent that she and her husband would need to hire an additional child care provider.

While the hospitalist-laborist model has been a valuable addition to obstetrics, Dr. Phipps said, “it’s our challenge to continue to think creatively about how we can keep clinicians engaged when they’re in the earlier parts of their careers and challenged by family responsibilities and other commitments.”

Both she and Dr. Levy emphasized their concerns about burnout and their desire to keep career satisfaction high – especially now that women are such a big part of ob.gyn. – and both spoke of the importance of making time for whatever activities help women “recharge.”

“We should be doing what we’re doing because we love it,” Dr. Levy said. “We should focus on that every day. Our patients trust us. We need to remind ourselves of what incredible connections we have.”

 

 

Throughout 2016, Ob.Gyn. News will celebrate its 50th anniversary with exclusive articles looking at the evolution of the specialty, including the history of contraception, changes in gynecologic surgery, and the transformation of the well-woman visit. Look for these articles and more special features in the pages of Ob.Gyn. News and online at obgynnews.com.

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