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IDENTIFYING FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE GENDER DISPARITIES IN PHYSICIAN INCOME: IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC POLICY
Access this item.
Title
IDENTIFYING
FACTORS
THAT
INFLUENCE
GENDER
DISPARITIES
IN
PHYSICIAN
INCOME:
IMPLICATIONS
FOR
PUBLIC
POLICY
Author
Bolyard, Wendy
Keywords
physician
income
gender
structural equation modeling
Abstract
Research
has
shown
that
female
physicians
continue
to
earn
less
than their
male
counterparts.
From
both
social
justice
and
feminist
perspectives
,
laws
requiring
equal
pay
should
provide
just
income
for
females
as
compared
to
males.
However
, the
literature
continues
to
indicate
that in
general
females
earn
less
than
males
, a
trend
that
is
also
true
for
physicians.
Theoretically
informed
postulates
are
measured
here with
structural
equation
modeling
to
test
the
influence
of the
unique
latent
construct
"specialization"
on the
income
gap
while
controlling
for
demographic
and
contextual
variables.
The
analysis
tests
the
assumption
that the
influence
of
specialization
is
the
same
for
females
and
males.
If the
influence
of
specialization
and
other
variables
differs
by
gender
,
gender
bias
in
physician
income
may
be
conceptually
implied.
The
study
uses
three
waves
of
data
from the
Community
Tracking
Study
Physician
Survey
(CTS).
The
study
finds
an
income
gap
between
females
and
males
in
three
waves
of the
CTS.
Gini
coefficients
show
females
continue
to
experience
greater
income
inequality
than
males
, with the
Lorenz
curves
for
males
being
closer
to the
equality
lines.
Using
1999
income
data
, there
is
a
statistically
significant
income
gap
between
female
and
male
physicians
when
controlling
for
weeks
worked.
Information
Technology
(IT)
use
was
found
to be the
most
reliable
construct
measuring
the
unique
latent
variable
specialization.
Structural
equation
modeling
showed
indicators
of
specialization
have an
influence
on the
income
gap.
The
variables
in the
CTS
Physician
Survey
made
for a
poor
construct
that
failed
to
measure
specialization
as a
uni-dimensional
construct.
The
variables
that
influence
the
income
gap
were
different
for
females
than for
males.
As
policy
makers
revise
or
create
better
laws
to
protect
income
equality
,
gender
differences
must
be
taken
into
consideration.
Adviser
Wan, Thomas
Publisher
University
of
Central
Florida
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Discipline
Other
Degree Grantor
Health and Public Affairs
Degree Program
Public Affairs: Ph.D.
Graduation Date
2006-08-01
Type
Doctoral dissertation
Access Level
Public - Allow Worldwide Access
Release Date
2007-01-31
Repository
University Archives
Repository Collection
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Identifier
CFE0001245
Access Link
http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/CFE0001245
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