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– Black and Hispanic pediatric faculty earn less than their White counterparts regardless of rank and degree, according to a study presented at the American Academy of Pediatrics National Conference.

“Our results demonstrated broad disparities in compensation by both gender and race/ethnicity,” Kimberly Montez, MD, MPH, of the department of pediatrics at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C., told attendees.

Dr. Montez is an assistant professor of pediatrics at Wake Forest University School of Medicine
Dr. Kimberly Montez

Arghavan Salles, MD, PhD, of Stanford (Calif.) University and a senior research scholar at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research, also in Stanford, was not involved in this study but conducts similar research and was unsurprised by these findings.

“It may surprise some people that these gender-based disparities persist in pediatrics, given it is a female-dominated specialty,” Dr. Salles said in an interview. “However, we see the same pattern in other female-dominated medical fields, such as obstetrics and gynecology and nursing.”

Dr. Montez, also the associate director of Wake Forest’s Maya Angelou Center for Health Equity and the associate editor for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Justice at the journal Pediatrics, told attendees that it’s important for academic medical centers to “identify, acknowledge, and address inequities in compensation models, including conducting transparent salary audits, standardizing new hire compensation benchmarks, and automatic review of salary outliers.”

Among the barriers to advancement that exist in academic medicine for individuals underrepresented in medicine are “racism, bias, discrimination, lack of mentorship, and the minority tax – extra responsibilities placed on individuals in the name of diversity,” Dr. Montez said. She drew attention to an article she coauthored in Pediatrics in August that highlighted how historically underrepresented individuals’ representation declined as rank increased and how the diversity of faculty pediatricians does not reflect that of the U.S. population.

Dr. Salles elaborated on the “minority tax” Dr. Montez referenced.

Faculty who are underrepresented in medicine “unfairly bear the majority of the responsibility to mentor [underrepresented] trainees and are more likely to be asked to serve in diversity, equity, and inclusion roles,” Dr. Salles said. “This work is too often uncompensated and undervalued, thereby affecting compensation.” This work also plays a role in gender salary disparities since women, especially women of color, are more likely to take on these roles, Dr. Salles added.

In this study, Dr. Montez and her colleagues aimed to investigate the differences in pediatric faculty salaries by race, ethnicity, and rank and then assess the association of median salary with race/ethnicity after adjustment for degree, rank, and gender. They conducted a cross-sectional study relying on 2020-2021 pediatric faculty median compensation data from the Association of American Medical Colleges annual Medical School Faculty Salary Survey report. The report had a response rate greater than 98% from the 152 medical schools queried.

For both the AAMC report and this study, individuals underrepresented in medicine included those who are African American/Black, Hispanic, American Indian/Alaska Native, or Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander.

The survey included data on 26,548 pediatric faculty, 58% of whom were women, with a median salary of $216,289. Two-thirds of these faculty (67.2%) were White, 4.5% were Hispanic, and 4.4% were Black. Half (50%) were assistant professors, 25% were associate professors, and 17% were professors.

”Women were overly represented among instructors and assistant professors, while men were overly represented [among] associate professors, professors, chiefs, and chairs,” the authors reported. “Men consistently had higher median salaries among all ranks and races/ethnicities.”

For positions of associate professor, professor, chief, and chair, representation of those underrepresented in medicine decreased compared with their overall percentage, but the trend was the opposite for White faculty, who were overrepresented in higher positions relative to their overall percentage. Those with the lowest median salary across all ranks and races/ethnicities were Hispanic women.

Median salaries for those underrepresented in medicine were lower than salaries of White faculty even after adjustment for degree. Black, Hispanic, and American Indian or Alaska Native faculty also had lower median salaries than White faculty after adjusting for rank, but Asian faculty and those who self-identified as “other” race/ethnicity had slightly higher median salaries than White faculty.

Though the findings were not surprising overall, Dr. Montez did note a couple unexpected findings: Hispanic women earn the least across all ranks and Black men earn the most at the associate and professor levels – though Black men also represent a very tiny percentage of individuals at those ranks in the first place.

Dr. Salles noted that the gender wage gap appears widest for Hispanic physicians, compared with White or Black physicians. “It’s important to keep in mind, though, that due to structural racism, implicit bias, and many other factors, there are very few Black and Hispanic full professors of medicine,” Dr. Salles said.  

“Gender bias, sexism, and misogyny” are among the many factors that contribute to the gender pay gap,” Dr. Salles said, and ”the work of women is not valued in the same way as the work of men.”

She pointed to past research showing that CVs with male names at the top are judged as better than those with female names at the top.

”Similarly, it will be judged as being better if the name is Emily or Greg rather than Lakisha or Jamal,” Dr. Salles said. “These findings suggest we evaluate people’s work through the lens of who we think they are and we automatically judge women and other marginalized people to be less worthy.”

Dr. Montez agreed that discrimination is the most likely reason for the salary disparities between men and women and also noted additional factors.

“Women are more likely to shoulder the household and childcare responsibilities as compared to men and they may accept a lower salary for other benefits, such as flexible work hours [and] onsite childcare,” Dr. Montez said. In addition, she said, since most chairs in academic pediatrics are men, new women faculty may not feel able to negotiate higher salaries, or may feel different pressures than men.

Dr. Salles emphasized the importance of not blaming women for not negotiating enough since “women pay a social penalty when they do negotiate.” This problem is likely compounded for women of color, she added. “Offering equitable packages to begin with, rather than requiring applicants to negotiate, would be more equitable.”

Because the AAMC report data was disaggregated, it’s not possible to identify trends by institution, Dr. Montez said, but the August article specifically recommends “that future data be institution specific, and provide race, ethnicity, sex, and rank information, including hiring and promotion details,” including salary information.

In fact, a publicly available, institution-specific equity dashboard would be a “minimum starting point” for tracking and addressing disparities as well as the effect of any interventions, Dr. Montez said. She noted other potential policies that could ameliorate disparities.

“Given that caregiving responsibilities for women often lead to fewer hours worked, work interruptions, and less opportunity for advancement, restructuring jobs with more flexible work schedules without pay reduction and not limiting advancement based on part-time status could be considered,” Dr. Montez said. ”For promotion, given that individuals [underrepresented in medicine] often shoulder the minority tax, institutions should develop promotion criteria to account for this academic credit. Institutions could also implement an annual salary-monitoring system with corrections, should it reveal disparities.”

Dr. Salles consults for Intuitive Surgical and the Intuitive Foundation, but neither of these are related to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Dr. Montez had no disclosures. The study involved no external funding.

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– Black and Hispanic pediatric faculty earn less than their White counterparts regardless of rank and degree, according to a study presented at the American Academy of Pediatrics National Conference.

“Our results demonstrated broad disparities in compensation by both gender and race/ethnicity,” Kimberly Montez, MD, MPH, of the department of pediatrics at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C., told attendees.

Dr. Montez is an assistant professor of pediatrics at Wake Forest University School of Medicine
Dr. Kimberly Montez

Arghavan Salles, MD, PhD, of Stanford (Calif.) University and a senior research scholar at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research, also in Stanford, was not involved in this study but conducts similar research and was unsurprised by these findings.

“It may surprise some people that these gender-based disparities persist in pediatrics, given it is a female-dominated specialty,” Dr. Salles said in an interview. “However, we see the same pattern in other female-dominated medical fields, such as obstetrics and gynecology and nursing.”

Dr. Montez, also the associate director of Wake Forest’s Maya Angelou Center for Health Equity and the associate editor for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Justice at the journal Pediatrics, told attendees that it’s important for academic medical centers to “identify, acknowledge, and address inequities in compensation models, including conducting transparent salary audits, standardizing new hire compensation benchmarks, and automatic review of salary outliers.”

Among the barriers to advancement that exist in academic medicine for individuals underrepresented in medicine are “racism, bias, discrimination, lack of mentorship, and the minority tax – extra responsibilities placed on individuals in the name of diversity,” Dr. Montez said. She drew attention to an article she coauthored in Pediatrics in August that highlighted how historically underrepresented individuals’ representation declined as rank increased and how the diversity of faculty pediatricians does not reflect that of the U.S. population.

Dr. Salles elaborated on the “minority tax” Dr. Montez referenced.

Faculty who are underrepresented in medicine “unfairly bear the majority of the responsibility to mentor [underrepresented] trainees and are more likely to be asked to serve in diversity, equity, and inclusion roles,” Dr. Salles said. “This work is too often uncompensated and undervalued, thereby affecting compensation.” This work also plays a role in gender salary disparities since women, especially women of color, are more likely to take on these roles, Dr. Salles added.

In this study, Dr. Montez and her colleagues aimed to investigate the differences in pediatric faculty salaries by race, ethnicity, and rank and then assess the association of median salary with race/ethnicity after adjustment for degree, rank, and gender. They conducted a cross-sectional study relying on 2020-2021 pediatric faculty median compensation data from the Association of American Medical Colleges annual Medical School Faculty Salary Survey report. The report had a response rate greater than 98% from the 152 medical schools queried.

For both the AAMC report and this study, individuals underrepresented in medicine included those who are African American/Black, Hispanic, American Indian/Alaska Native, or Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander.

The survey included data on 26,548 pediatric faculty, 58% of whom were women, with a median salary of $216,289. Two-thirds of these faculty (67.2%) were White, 4.5% were Hispanic, and 4.4% were Black. Half (50%) were assistant professors, 25% were associate professors, and 17% were professors.

”Women were overly represented among instructors and assistant professors, while men were overly represented [among] associate professors, professors, chiefs, and chairs,” the authors reported. “Men consistently had higher median salaries among all ranks and races/ethnicities.”

For positions of associate professor, professor, chief, and chair, representation of those underrepresented in medicine decreased compared with their overall percentage, but the trend was the opposite for White faculty, who were overrepresented in higher positions relative to their overall percentage. Those with the lowest median salary across all ranks and races/ethnicities were Hispanic women.

Median salaries for those underrepresented in medicine were lower than salaries of White faculty even after adjustment for degree. Black, Hispanic, and American Indian or Alaska Native faculty also had lower median salaries than White faculty after adjusting for rank, but Asian faculty and those who self-identified as “other” race/ethnicity had slightly higher median salaries than White faculty.

Though the findings were not surprising overall, Dr. Montez did note a couple unexpected findings: Hispanic women earn the least across all ranks and Black men earn the most at the associate and professor levels – though Black men also represent a very tiny percentage of individuals at those ranks in the first place.

Dr. Salles noted that the gender wage gap appears widest for Hispanic physicians, compared with White or Black physicians. “It’s important to keep in mind, though, that due to structural racism, implicit bias, and many other factors, there are very few Black and Hispanic full professors of medicine,” Dr. Salles said.  

“Gender bias, sexism, and misogyny” are among the many factors that contribute to the gender pay gap,” Dr. Salles said, and ”the work of women is not valued in the same way as the work of men.”

She pointed to past research showing that CVs with male names at the top are judged as better than those with female names at the top.

”Similarly, it will be judged as being better if the name is Emily or Greg rather than Lakisha or Jamal,” Dr. Salles said. “These findings suggest we evaluate people’s work through the lens of who we think they are and we automatically judge women and other marginalized people to be less worthy.”

Dr. Montez agreed that discrimination is the most likely reason for the salary disparities between men and women and also noted additional factors.

“Women are more likely to shoulder the household and childcare responsibilities as compared to men and they may accept a lower salary for other benefits, such as flexible work hours [and] onsite childcare,” Dr. Montez said. In addition, she said, since most chairs in academic pediatrics are men, new women faculty may not feel able to negotiate higher salaries, or may feel different pressures than men.

Dr. Salles emphasized the importance of not blaming women for not negotiating enough since “women pay a social penalty when they do negotiate.” This problem is likely compounded for women of color, she added. “Offering equitable packages to begin with, rather than requiring applicants to negotiate, would be more equitable.”

Because the AAMC report data was disaggregated, it’s not possible to identify trends by institution, Dr. Montez said, but the August article specifically recommends “that future data be institution specific, and provide race, ethnicity, sex, and rank information, including hiring and promotion details,” including salary information.

In fact, a publicly available, institution-specific equity dashboard would be a “minimum starting point” for tracking and addressing disparities as well as the effect of any interventions, Dr. Montez said. She noted other potential policies that could ameliorate disparities.

“Given that caregiving responsibilities for women often lead to fewer hours worked, work interruptions, and less opportunity for advancement, restructuring jobs with more flexible work schedules without pay reduction and not limiting advancement based on part-time status could be considered,” Dr. Montez said. ”For promotion, given that individuals [underrepresented in medicine] often shoulder the minority tax, institutions should develop promotion criteria to account for this academic credit. Institutions could also implement an annual salary-monitoring system with corrections, should it reveal disparities.”

Dr. Salles consults for Intuitive Surgical and the Intuitive Foundation, but neither of these are related to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Dr. Montez had no disclosures. The study involved no external funding.

– Black and Hispanic pediatric faculty earn less than their White counterparts regardless of rank and degree, according to a study presented at the American Academy of Pediatrics National Conference.

“Our results demonstrated broad disparities in compensation by both gender and race/ethnicity,” Kimberly Montez, MD, MPH, of the department of pediatrics at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C., told attendees.

Dr. Montez is an assistant professor of pediatrics at Wake Forest University School of Medicine
Dr. Kimberly Montez

Arghavan Salles, MD, PhD, of Stanford (Calif.) University and a senior research scholar at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research, also in Stanford, was not involved in this study but conducts similar research and was unsurprised by these findings.

“It may surprise some people that these gender-based disparities persist in pediatrics, given it is a female-dominated specialty,” Dr. Salles said in an interview. “However, we see the same pattern in other female-dominated medical fields, such as obstetrics and gynecology and nursing.”

Dr. Montez, also the associate director of Wake Forest’s Maya Angelou Center for Health Equity and the associate editor for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Justice at the journal Pediatrics, told attendees that it’s important for academic medical centers to “identify, acknowledge, and address inequities in compensation models, including conducting transparent salary audits, standardizing new hire compensation benchmarks, and automatic review of salary outliers.”

Among the barriers to advancement that exist in academic medicine for individuals underrepresented in medicine are “racism, bias, discrimination, lack of mentorship, and the minority tax – extra responsibilities placed on individuals in the name of diversity,” Dr. Montez said. She drew attention to an article she coauthored in Pediatrics in August that highlighted how historically underrepresented individuals’ representation declined as rank increased and how the diversity of faculty pediatricians does not reflect that of the U.S. population.

Dr. Salles elaborated on the “minority tax” Dr. Montez referenced.

Faculty who are underrepresented in medicine “unfairly bear the majority of the responsibility to mentor [underrepresented] trainees and are more likely to be asked to serve in diversity, equity, and inclusion roles,” Dr. Salles said. “This work is too often uncompensated and undervalued, thereby affecting compensation.” This work also plays a role in gender salary disparities since women, especially women of color, are more likely to take on these roles, Dr. Salles added.

In this study, Dr. Montez and her colleagues aimed to investigate the differences in pediatric faculty salaries by race, ethnicity, and rank and then assess the association of median salary with race/ethnicity after adjustment for degree, rank, and gender. They conducted a cross-sectional study relying on 2020-2021 pediatric faculty median compensation data from the Association of American Medical Colleges annual Medical School Faculty Salary Survey report. The report had a response rate greater than 98% from the 152 medical schools queried.

For both the AAMC report and this study, individuals underrepresented in medicine included those who are African American/Black, Hispanic, American Indian/Alaska Native, or Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander.

The survey included data on 26,548 pediatric faculty, 58% of whom were women, with a median salary of $216,289. Two-thirds of these faculty (67.2%) were White, 4.5% were Hispanic, and 4.4% were Black. Half (50%) were assistant professors, 25% were associate professors, and 17% were professors.

”Women were overly represented among instructors and assistant professors, while men were overly represented [among] associate professors, professors, chiefs, and chairs,” the authors reported. “Men consistently had higher median salaries among all ranks and races/ethnicities.”

For positions of associate professor, professor, chief, and chair, representation of those underrepresented in medicine decreased compared with their overall percentage, but the trend was the opposite for White faculty, who were overrepresented in higher positions relative to their overall percentage. Those with the lowest median salary across all ranks and races/ethnicities were Hispanic women.

Median salaries for those underrepresented in medicine were lower than salaries of White faculty even after adjustment for degree. Black, Hispanic, and American Indian or Alaska Native faculty also had lower median salaries than White faculty after adjusting for rank, but Asian faculty and those who self-identified as “other” race/ethnicity had slightly higher median salaries than White faculty.

Though the findings were not surprising overall, Dr. Montez did note a couple unexpected findings: Hispanic women earn the least across all ranks and Black men earn the most at the associate and professor levels – though Black men also represent a very tiny percentage of individuals at those ranks in the first place.

Dr. Salles noted that the gender wage gap appears widest for Hispanic physicians, compared with White or Black physicians. “It’s important to keep in mind, though, that due to structural racism, implicit bias, and many other factors, there are very few Black and Hispanic full professors of medicine,” Dr. Salles said.  

“Gender bias, sexism, and misogyny” are among the many factors that contribute to the gender pay gap,” Dr. Salles said, and ”the work of women is not valued in the same way as the work of men.”

She pointed to past research showing that CVs with male names at the top are judged as better than those with female names at the top.

”Similarly, it will be judged as being better if the name is Emily or Greg rather than Lakisha or Jamal,” Dr. Salles said. “These findings suggest we evaluate people’s work through the lens of who we think they are and we automatically judge women and other marginalized people to be less worthy.”

Dr. Montez agreed that discrimination is the most likely reason for the salary disparities between men and women and also noted additional factors.

“Women are more likely to shoulder the household and childcare responsibilities as compared to men and they may accept a lower salary for other benefits, such as flexible work hours [and] onsite childcare,” Dr. Montez said. In addition, she said, since most chairs in academic pediatrics are men, new women faculty may not feel able to negotiate higher salaries, or may feel different pressures than men.

Dr. Salles emphasized the importance of not blaming women for not negotiating enough since “women pay a social penalty when they do negotiate.” This problem is likely compounded for women of color, she added. “Offering equitable packages to begin with, rather than requiring applicants to negotiate, would be more equitable.”

Because the AAMC report data was disaggregated, it’s not possible to identify trends by institution, Dr. Montez said, but the August article specifically recommends “that future data be institution specific, and provide race, ethnicity, sex, and rank information, including hiring and promotion details,” including salary information.

In fact, a publicly available, institution-specific equity dashboard would be a “minimum starting point” for tracking and addressing disparities as well as the effect of any interventions, Dr. Montez said. She noted other potential policies that could ameliorate disparities.

“Given that caregiving responsibilities for women often lead to fewer hours worked, work interruptions, and less opportunity for advancement, restructuring jobs with more flexible work schedules without pay reduction and not limiting advancement based on part-time status could be considered,” Dr. Montez said. ”For promotion, given that individuals [underrepresented in medicine] often shoulder the minority tax, institutions should develop promotion criteria to account for this academic credit. Institutions could also implement an annual salary-monitoring system with corrections, should it reveal disparities.”

Dr. Salles consults for Intuitive Surgical and the Intuitive Foundation, but neither of these are related to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Dr. Montez had no disclosures. The study involved no external funding.

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