Academic Pathology (Apr 2021)

Women in Academic Pathology: Pathways to Department Chair

  • Mary F. Lipscomb MD,
  • David N. Bailey MD,
  • Lydia P. Howell MD,
  • Rebecca Johnson MD,
  • Nancy Joste MD,
  • Debra G. B. Leonard MD, PhD,
  • Priscilla Markwood CAE,
  • Vivian W. Pinn MD,
  • Deborah Powell MD,
  • MarieAnn Thornburg MBA, FACMPE,
  • Dani S. Zander MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23742895211010322
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

Read online

The Association of Pathology Chairs, an organization of American and Canadian academic pathology departments, has a record percent of women department chairs in its ranks (31%), although still not representative of the percent of women pathology faculty (43%). These women chairs were surveyed to determine what had impeded and what had facilitated their academic advancement before becoming chairs. The 2 most frequently identified impediments to their career advancement were heavy clinical loads and the lack of time, training, and/or funding to pursue research. Related to the second impediment, only one respondent became chair of a department which was in a top 25 National Institutes of Health–sponsored research medical school. Eighty-nine percent of respondents said that they had experienced gender bias during their careers in pathology, and 31% identified gender bias as an important impediment to advancement. The top facilitator of career advancement before becoming chairs was a supportive family. Strikingly, 98% of respondents have a spouse or partner, 75% have children, and 38% had children younger than 18 when becoming chairs. Additional top facilitators were opportunities to attend national meetings and opportunities to participate in leadership. Previous leadership experiences included directing a clinical service, a residency training program, and/or a medical student education program. These results suggest important ways to increase the success of women in academic pathology and increasing the percent of women department chairs, including supporting a family life and providing time, encouragement and resources for research, attending national meetings, and taking on departmental leadership positions.