Mentorship in Plastic Surgery: A Critical Appraisal of Where We Stand and What We Can Do Better.

Plastic and reconstructive surgery 2021 Vol.148(3) p. 667-677

Myers PL, Amalfi AN, Ramanadham SR

Abstract

Mentorship is a critical tool for professional development and career success. In academic surgery, supportive mentorship affords higher job satisfaction, academic productivity, and diversity and inclusion. It protects against burnout and increasing academic surgery attrition rates. Women, underrepresented minorities, and junior plastic surgeons report lower job satisfaction and fewer mentorship opportunities. Given the unique challenges these groups face in a constantly changing health care system, the importance of mentorship cannot be overstated. Through a survey of American Society of Plastic Surgeons members, this study evaluated different aspects of mentorship to describe the current state in plastic surgery. Despite 94.05 percent of plastic surgeons believing that mentorship is valuable, only 15.16 percent reported a structured mentorship system, often without evaluation. Male and female participants agree that mentorship is needed for both professional (clinical judgment) and personal (work-life balance) development. Interestingly, women plastic surgeons felt it was important for mentees to have gender and race/ethnicity concordance to their mentors (p < 0.001). There was no agreement regarding the most effective method to implement mentorship programs, highlighting the challenges of this problem. Through thoughtful planning and commitment, mentorship programs can be instituted to benefit not just the mentee, but the mentor as well.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
기타 Women scispacy 1
기타 participants scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Faculty, Medical; Female; Humans; Job Satisfaction; Male; Mentoring; Mentors; Societies, Medical; Surgeons; Surgery, Plastic; Surveys and Questionnaires; United States; Work-Life Balance