southernhybrid
Contributor
What if women make better doctors than men? Does that mean that only women should be allowed to be physicians, NPs, PAs or even RNs?
https://blogs.sph.harvard.edu/ashish-jha/2016/12/19/do-women-make-better-doctors-than-men/
I am biased although my bias is based on my 42 years as a health care professional. Yes. For the most part, women are better doctors than men. The exception would probably be in orthopedic surgery on large joints and bones, because statistically speaking, men have more upper body strength than women.
Of course, I'm poking a little fun at the other thread that claims that men are better at math. They have a slight advantage statistically, but there are plenty of women who are exceptional at higher mathematics. Women just tend to like careers more that involve interacting with people. The reason that until the last few decades, most physicians were men is due to gender discrimination. Even now, female doctors tend to make less money than male doctors, despite, according to the Harvard study, statistically working longer hours than men.
And while I do prefer a female physician or NP, I have known a few male doctors that I felt were competent and caring. Just like some women are outstanding in math and technology, there are some men who are capable of being good physicians.
In conclusions, I encourage you all to choose a female health provider because statistically speaking, women are better health care providers than men.
Other than the way that women are treated in the workplace, including making less money, I'm not sure why we are putting so many threads in politics lately. Has everything become political?
https://blogs.sph.harvard.edu/ashish-jha/2016/12/19/do-women-make-better-doctors-than-men/
First, we examined differences in patient outcomes for female and male physicians across all medical conditions. Then, we adjusted for patient and physician characteristics. Next, we threw in a hospital “fixed-effect” – a statistical technique that ensures that we only compare male and female physicians within the same hospital. Finally, we did a series of additional analyses to check if our results held across more specific conditions.
We found that female physicians had lower 30-day mortality rates compared to male physicians. Holding patient, physician, and hospital characteristics constant narrowed that gap a little, but not much. After throwing everything into the model that we could, we were still left with a difference of about 0.43 percentage points (see table), a modest but clinically important difference (more on this below).
Next, we focused on the 8 most common conditions (to ensure that our findings weren’t driven by differences in a few conditions only) and found that across all 8 conditions, female physicians had better outcomes. Finally, we looked at subgroups by risk. We wondered – is the advantage of having a female physician still true if we just focus on the sickest patients? The answer is yes – in fact, the biggest gap in outcomes was among the very sickest patients. The sicker you are, the bigger the benefit of having a female physician (see figure).
Additionally, we did a variety of other “sensitivity” analyses, of which the most important focused on hospitalists. The biggest threat to any study that examines differences between physicians is selection – patients can choose their doctor (or doctors can choose their patients) in ways that make the groups of patients non-comparable. However, when patients are hospitalized for an acute illness, increasingly, they receive care from a “hospitalist” – a doctor who spends all of their clinical time in the hospital caring for whoever is admitted during their shift. This allows for “pseudo-randomization.” And the results? Again, female hospitalists had lower mortality than male hospitalists.
I am biased although my bias is based on my 42 years as a health care professional. Yes. For the most part, women are better doctors than men. The exception would probably be in orthopedic surgery on large joints and bones, because statistically speaking, men have more upper body strength than women.
Of course, I'm poking a little fun at the other thread that claims that men are better at math. They have a slight advantage statistically, but there are plenty of women who are exceptional at higher mathematics. Women just tend to like careers more that involve interacting with people. The reason that until the last few decades, most physicians were men is due to gender discrimination. Even now, female doctors tend to make less money than male doctors, despite, according to the Harvard study, statistically working longer hours than men.
And while I do prefer a female physician or NP, I have known a few male doctors that I felt were competent and caring. Just like some women are outstanding in math and technology, there are some men who are capable of being good physicians.
In conclusions, I encourage you all to choose a female health provider because statistically speaking, women are better health care providers than men.
Other than the way that women are treated in the workplace, including making less money, I'm not sure why we are putting so many threads in politics lately. Has everything become political?