âCelebrating and promoting women in academic medicineâ was organised by the British Medical Association and held at BMA House on 17 October.
After a âspeed mentoringâ opening session, Parveen Kumar, professor of medicine and education at Queen Mary University of London, described âwhat helped me find my way to successâ.
Although she regretted that she had âlost my younger years, working even harder to prove I was as good as any manâ, she also offered a number of pointers: âDonât ask anyone to do what you wouldnât doâ; âAvoid confrontation unless absolutely necessaryâ; and âChoose your path⊠look 10 years aheadâ.
Delegates raised questions from the floor about âthe very gendered definitions of successâ; the part-time women doctors who in effect pay to go to work, since childcare costs absorb their whole salary; and the case for making payment to nannies tax-deductible professional expenses.
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Along with a presentation on the value of the Athena SWAN Charter in promoting the cause of women within academic medicine, smaller discussion groups offered opportunities for sharing experiences and suggestions. A group of mainly hospital trainees considered the particular issues relating to âacademic women and hospital medicineâ.
âAcademic medicine will always have two masters,â a moderator explained, âneither of which will cut you any slack.â But since the key metrics were papers and grants, researchers enjoyed a certain âautonomy over diariesâ denied to full-time clinicians, and this could be âliberating when it comes to jugglingâ. A consultant argued that it was essential to fight for blocks of âprotected timeâ where they could focus on their science, which was often easier if they could secure independent sources of funding.
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Meanwhile, those starting careers were advised to be âpleasantly inflexibleâ in response to unreasonable demands and to ensure that academic representatives on hospital trustsâ local negotiating committees took account of their concerns. They should also carve out for themselves a small, self-contained area of real clinical expertise â the only people who managed to oversee large research projects while also doing general medicine were men with stay-at-home wives, the event heard.
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