Worth Their Salt

Publicly available databases reveal gender-based salary disparities in medicine

Image: iStock

Image: iStock

Women physicians earn an average of $20,000 per year less than men even after adjusting for factors likely to influence income, according to what is probably the largest study of salary differences between male and female medical school faculty members.

The study, which analyzed data for physicians employed at 24 public medical schools, appears online in JAMA Internal Medicine.

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“More than raising attention to salary sex differences in medicine, our findings highlight the fact that these differences persist even when we account for detailed factors that influence income and reflect academic productivity,” said Anupam Jena, the HMS Ruth L. Newhouse Associate Professor of Health Care Policy, and an internist at Massachusetts General Hospital.

“The fact that we observed these income differences among physicians who are public employees raises issues that may have state regulatory implications,” he said.

While several previous studies have documented salary differences between male and female physicians working in academic medicine, those investigations have been relatively small, restricted to specific specialties or depended on participants’ responses to survey questions.

The current study started with employee information—including names, titles and salaries—from public medical schools in 12 states that make such information available online. The researchers merged that data on physician faculty salaries with information from the Doximity database of more than 700,000 U.S. physicians.

That database includes demographic and professional factors including age, gender, faculty rank, university affiliation, specialty, year of residency completion, type of clinical practice (based on receiving Medicare payments) and several indicators of research activity.

Among their final sample of almost 10,250 physician faculty members—35 percent of whom were women—the unadjusted average annual salaries of women were almost 20 percent lower ($206,641 versus $257,947) than those of male physicians.

After adjusting for the factors mentioned above, female physician faculty members still received salaries 8 percent lower than those of comparable male physicians ($227,783 versus $247,661).

Adjusted salary disparities were greatest for orthopedic surgery, obstetrics/gynecology (one of the specialties female physicians were most likely to enter), other surgical subspecialties and cardiology, and lowest for family medicine and emergency medicine.

Adjusted average salaries for women in radiology were slightly higher than for men.

Disparities also varied among medical schools, with adjusted average salaries for male physicians being significantly higher at nine schools—the greatest disparities occurring at schools in the western U.S.

“Our findings also highlight how non-traditional data sets like Doximity and public employee salary information can be used to investigate questions that historically have been difficult to evaluate due to lack of access to large-scale data,” said co-author Daniel Blumenthal, HMS research fellow in medicine and clinical fellow in the Mass General Division of Cardiology.

The study was supported by National Institutes of Health Early Independence Award 1DP P50D017897-01.

Adapted from a Mass General news release.