Publications [#301609] of Peter A Ubel

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Journal Articles

  1. Holliday, E; Griffith, KA; De Castro, R; Stewart, A; Ubel, P; Jagsi, R. "Gender differences in resources and negotiation among highly motivated physician-scientists.." Journal of general internal medicine 30.4 (April, 2015): 401-407. [doi]
    (last updated on 2024/04/24)

    Abstract:

    Background

    Resources, including space, equipment, funding, personnel, and protected time, are essential in academic medical careers. Negotiation often plays a key role in the distribution of these resources.

    Objective

    This study explored gender differences in resources, negotiation behaviors, and negotiation outcomes in a sample of career development awardees.

    Design

    Postal survey of a cohort of 1,708 clinician-researchers with responses from 1,275 (75 % response rate).

    Participants

    Researchers who received NIH K08 or K23 awards between 2006 and 2009.

    Main measures

    We analyzed gender differences in resources, negotiation behaviors, and negotiation outcomes, using regression models adjusted for race, K award type, K award year, degree, academic rank, specialty, and institutional funding.

    Key results

    Over one-fifth of respondents reported inadequate access to research space and one-third had asked for increased space or equipment. Perceived adequacy of these physical resources did not differ significantly by gender, but a higher proportion of women reported inadequate access to grants administrators (34.8 %) and statistical support (49.9 %) than men (26.9 %; p = 0.002 and 43.4 %; p = 0.025, respectively). Women were more likely to have asked for reduction in clinical hours (24.1 % vs. 19.3 %; p = 0.02) and to have raised concerns about unfair treatment (50.2 % vs. 38.2 %; p < 0.001). Overall, 42.9 % of women and 35.9 % of men asked for a raise in the two years preceding the survey (p = 0.09), and among those who had asked for increased resources, the likelihood that the request was granted did not differ significantly by gender.

    Conclusion

    Many career development award recipients report resource needs and negotiate for increased resources. Gender differences in perceived access to research support personnel exist even in this select cohort of K awardees. Institutions should provide appropriate training in negotiation and ensure adequate and equitable distribution of resources to promote academic success.

Peter A Ubel