Friday, August 07, 2015

Anant Bhan on Gender Gap in Medical Education Leadership in India


Anant Bhan has a link-filled post over at British Medical Journal Blogs:

Given the high number of women entering medicine—a status report in 2012 pegged the number of female medical students in India at around 200 000, compared with 175 000 male students—and subsequently also joining as faculty in medical colleges, one would expect a significant number of them to occupy top leadership positions in medical education. This is where there seems to be a gap—much fewer women occupy positions of director or principal in medical colleges in India than men.

Let’s take the example of those institutes of national importance in India which offer medical education courses. There are 11 of them: the seven All India Institutes of Medical Science (AIIMS; in Delhi, Rishikesh, Jodhpur, Bhopal, Raipur, Patna, Bhubaneshwar), the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER, Chandigarh), the Jawaharlal Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research (JIPMER, Puducherry), the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuroscience (NIMHANS, Bengaluru), and the Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology (SCTIMST, Thiruvananthapuram). Of these 11 institutions, currently only one has a female director—Asha Kishore became the first female director of SCTIMST in mid-July 2015 after the institute had been without a director for two years.

1 Comments:

  1. Unknown said...

    Wow! some how that does not surprise me. We seem to revere in this notion that there is change coming, or there is this wave of feminism that will somehow recognize, value and equate female contribution to the society. Dont want to sound like a pessimist, but it'll be a while till woman, not only in India, but all over the world are treated without a bias.
    On a very different subject I have a blog as well- www.coffeetablescience.com, it would be great to get your feedback !
    Thanks
    Geetanjali