TY - JOUR
T1 - Achieving gender equity in academic psychiatry – barriers to involvement and solutions for success
AU - Galbally, Megan
AU - Kotze, Beth
AU - Bell, Caroline
AU - Quadrio, Carolyn
AU - Galletly, Cherrie
AU - Herrman, Helen
AU - Milroy, Helen
AU - Curtis, Jackie
AU - Green, Jessica
AU - Power, Josephine
AU - Hope, Judy
AU - Sevar, Katherine
AU - Dean, Kimberlie
AU - Northwood, Korinne
AU - Lampe, Lisa
AU - Kalucy, Megan
AU - Korman, Nicole
AU - Lautenschlager, Nicola
AU - Warren, Nicola
AU - Chua, Phyllis
AU - Anglin, Rebecca
AU - De Alwis Seneviratne, Ruwanthi
AU - Loi, Samantha
AU - Burton, Sara
AU - Arunogiri, Shalini
AU - Morgan, Shirlony
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Objective: Women face considerable barriers in pursuing careers in academic psychiatry. Methods: A group of Australian and New Zealand academic women psychiatrists convened in September 2022 to identify and propose solutions to increase opportunities for women in academic psychiatry. Results: Limiting factors were identified in pathways to academia including financial support, engagement and coordination between academia and clinical services, and flexible working conditions. Gender biases and the risk of burnout were additional and fundamental barriers. Potential solutions include offering advanced training certificates to enable trainees to commence a PhD and Fellowship contemporaneously; improved financial support; expanding opportunities for research involvement; establishing mentoring opportunities and communities of practice; and strategies to enhance safety at work and redress gender bias and imbalance in academia. Conclusions: Support for women in research careers will decrease gender disparity in academic psychiatry and may decrease problematic gender bias in research. Fellows and trainees, the RANZCP, universities, research institutes, governments, industry and health services should collaborate to develop and implement policies supporting changes in working conditions and training. Facilitating the entry and retention of women to careers in academic psychiatry requires mentoring and development of a community of practice to provide and enable support, role modelling, and inspiration.
AB - Objective: Women face considerable barriers in pursuing careers in academic psychiatry. Methods: A group of Australian and New Zealand academic women psychiatrists convened in September 2022 to identify and propose solutions to increase opportunities for women in academic psychiatry. Results: Limiting factors were identified in pathways to academia including financial support, engagement and coordination between academia and clinical services, and flexible working conditions. Gender biases and the risk of burnout were additional and fundamental barriers. Potential solutions include offering advanced training certificates to enable trainees to commence a PhD and Fellowship contemporaneously; improved financial support; expanding opportunities for research involvement; establishing mentoring opportunities and communities of practice; and strategies to enhance safety at work and redress gender bias and imbalance in academia. Conclusions: Support for women in research careers will decrease gender disparity in academic psychiatry and may decrease problematic gender bias in research. Fellows and trainees, the RANZCP, universities, research institutes, governments, industry and health services should collaborate to develop and implement policies supporting changes in working conditions and training. Facilitating the entry and retention of women to careers in academic psychiatry requires mentoring and development of a community of practice to provide and enable support, role modelling, and inspiration.
KW - academia
KW - Australia
KW - mentoring
KW - New Zealand
KW - psychiatry
KW - women
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85201960329&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/10398562241268362
DO - 10.1177/10398562241268362
M3 - Article
C2 - 39171851
AN - SCOPUS:85201960329
SN - 1039-8562
VL - 32
SP - 563
EP - 567
JO - Australasian Psychiatry
JF - Australasian Psychiatry
IS - 6
ER -