Gender Differences in Entrustable Professional Activity Evaluations of General Surgery Residents.

2021 
OBJECTIVE To determine differences in Entrustable Professional Activity (EPA) assessments between male and female general surgery residents. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA Evaluations play a critical role in career advancement for physicians. However, female physicians in training receive lower evaluations and underrate their own performance. Competency-based assessment frameworks, such as EPAs, may help address gender bias in surgery by linking evaluations to specific, observable behaviors. METHODS In this cohort study, EPA assessments were collected from July 2018 to May 2020. The effect of resident gender on EPA entrustment levels was analyzed using multiple linear and ordered logistic regressions. Narrative comments were analyzed using Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) to identify topics correlated with resident gender. RESULTS Of the 2,480 EPAs, 1,230 EPAs were submitted by faculty and 1,250 were submitted by residents. After controlling for confounding factors, faculty evaluations of residents were not impacted by resident gender (estimate = 0.09, p = 0.08). However, female residents rated themselves lower by 0.29 (on a 0-4 scale) compared to their male counterparts (p < 0.001). Within narrative assessments, topics associated with resident gender demonstrated that female residents focus on the 'guidance' and 'supervision' they received while performing an EPA, while male residents were more likely to report 'independent' action. CONCLUSIONS Faculty assessments showed no difference in EPA levels between male and female residents. Female residents rate themselves lower by nearly an entire PGY level compared to male residents. LDA-identified topics suggest this difference in self-assessment is related to differences in perception of autonomy.
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