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dc.contributor.authorWilliams, J
dc.contributor.authorMayes, C
dc.contributor.authorLipworth, W
dc.date.accessioned2016-10-12
dc.date.available2016-10-12
dc.date.issued2016-09-01
dc.identifier.citationWilliams, J., Mayes, C., Lipworth, W., Re: Operate with respect: how Australia is confronting sexual harassment of trainees. BMJ 2016; 354:i4210; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i4210 (Published 01 September 2016)en_AU
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2123/15756
dc.description.abstractWe applaud the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons for their action plan addressing bullying and harassment (1) but consider that the problem goes much deeper than surgeons behaving badly. In 2015, we conducted a focus group and interview study in New South Wales, Australia about conflicts of interest in medicine. Participants were medical students (focus groups), and medical educators and other clinicians (interviews). A theme that featured heavily in focus group discussions was the conflict that students and junior doctors felt between reporting others’ inappropriate behaviour and protecting their own jobs or job opportunities. These behaviours included bullying and harassment, as Coopes describes (2), but also actions that compromised patient safety such as not following procedures for scrubbing in or otherwise cutting corners. Participants struggled more with the idea of not reporting safety-compromising behaviours than with turning a blind eye to situations where they were (what they considered to be) the sole victims, such as bullying or harassment. In both scenarios, however, participants admitted they would be unlikely to report their senior colleagues. This reluctance seemed to stem from a deeply felt role conflict: students are taught that their responsibility is to patients, but know that reporting a doctor more senior than themselves is very likely to be harmful to their studies or careers. We agree there is a “culture of fear and reprisal” that prevents victims from making complaints, but we also suggest that the hierarchy that forms the backbone of Australia’s medical training and associated institutions means that the “silent bystanding” that Coopes mentions is enculturated from the outset of medical education. While both our participants and the College of Surgeons emphasise the importance of “culture change”, this needs to go deeper than introducing polices to address bullying. In addition to focusing on the day to day behavior of practicing senior clinicians, culture change efforts need to focus on the reality that current students and junior doctors are made acutely aware of existing hierarchies and their vulnerable career positions from their first years of medicine. Culture change also needs to address the imbalance of men and women in senior medical roles.en_AU
dc.language.isoenen_AU
dc.publisherBMJ Publishing Groupen_AU
dc.subjectbullying and harassmenten_AU
dc.subjectmedical studentsen_AU
dc.subjectcliniciansen_AU
dc.subjectinappropriate behaviouren_AU
dc.subjectculture of fear and reprisalen_AU
dc.subjectmedical educationen_AU
dc.subjectsenior cliniciansen_AU
dc.subjectculture changeen_AU
dc.subjectjunior doctorsen_AU
dc.titleRe: Operate with respect: how Australia is confronting sexual harassment of traineesen_AU
dc.typeArticle, Letteren_AU


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