Male and female physicians: Family and career comparisons
Peter Uhlenberg and
Teresa M. Cooney
Social Science & Medicine, 1990, vol. 30, issue 3, 373-378
Abstract:
This article compares career and family characteristics for male and female physicians aged 30-49 in the United States. Despite women's increased presence in the profession, male physicians still outearn and work more hours than their female counterparts. Males are also more often involved in families than are females. Compared with the U.S. population, male physicians are more likely to marry and parent, while the opposite is true for female physicians. The work-family interface also provides dramatic gender differences. Marriage and parenting, which might be expected to impinge on physicians' careers, actually seem to spur men's work commitment and earnings, but have the reverse effect for women. A review of research findings from other industrialized countries reveals similar gender differences in physicians' work and family patterns. The consequences of women's increased presence in the medical profession are discussed in light of these marked gender contrasts in work and family life.
Keywords: family; life; medical; careers; gender; differences (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1990
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