Gender bias in postgraduate year one pharmacy letters of recommendation

Anna Sahlstrom Drury, P. Brandon Bookstaver, Kevin Chang, Aaron M. Cook, Brandon Hobbs, Jonathan Leung, Jean Moon, Scott Nei, Aric Schadler, Corey Witenko, Brittany D. Bissell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction: Letters of recommendation (LORs) are important in pharmacy residency applications. Applicant gender, among other variables, may result in implicit biases that could impact LORs and/or residency attainment. This study hypothesized that LORs have linguistic gender differences in pharmacy residency applications. Objectives: The primary objective was to determine if gender-linguistic differences exist in applicants' LORs. Gender was assessed via the pronouns utilized within the applications. The secondary outcome was to assess LOR linguistic and demographic differences between candidates who did and did not receive interviews. Methods: This was a multiyear, multicenter study involving postgraduate year one (PGY1) applicants to participating pharmacy residency programs. Demographic data were extracted using the PhORCAS (Pharmacy Online Residency Centralized Application Service) WebADMIT (Admissions Management System) portal, and LORs were analyzed by validated linguistics processing software. Results: A total of 7529 LORs and 2383 applicants (28.5% men, 71.5% women) were included. Women candidates had higher mean number of awards (4.71 vs. 4.1, p = 0.001) and leadership positions (4.87 vs. 4.48, p = 0.019). Compared with men candidates, women had statistically significantly higher levels of clout (p < 0.001), positive emotion (p = 0.01), social processes (p < 0.001), prosocial behavior (p = 0.002), and social referents (p < 0.001). Women also had lower authenticity compared with men candidates (p < 0.001). Two thousand and one hundred twenty applicants included in the secondary analysis found no difference in offer to interview between women and men candidates (odds ratio [OR] 1.173 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.895–1.57], p = 0.247). Conclusions: Men and women applicants' LORS differed in specific linguistic variables, although offer to interview was not significantly different based on gender. LOR writers and programs should consider implicit biases that could affect residency offers to interview.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)446-457
Number of pages12
JournalJACCP Journal of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy
Volume6
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank Laura Holden, Pharm.D. and Nicole Bookstaver, Pharm.D. who assisted to provide data used in this study, Amanda Li and Amy Pavelka, M.A., for data their assistance with data collection, and Mikhaila Rice, Pharm.D. for her input in the study.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Pharmacotherapy Publications, Inc.

Keywords

  • bias
  • gender
  • linguistics
  • recommendation
  • residency
  • training

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