A senior surgeon says for women to protect their surgical careers, “complying with requests” for sex from male colleagues is a safer option than reporting the harassment.
Vascular surgeon Dr Gabrielle McMullin is a co-author of Pathways to Gender Equality – The Role of Merit and Quotas. The book was launched at Parliament House in Sydney last night.
Speaking to the ABC after the book launch Dr McMullin issued the reluctant warning to women entering medicine.
Despite increasing numbers of women entering the medical profession, Dr McMullin said sexual harassment in hospitals was rife.
She said she told trainees that giving in to sexual harassment was an easier path than pursuing the perpetrators, because of sexism among many male surgeons.
“What I tell my trainees is that, if you are approached for sex, probably the safest thing to do in terms of your career is to comply with the request,” she said.
Dr McMullin told the ABC the story of a neurosurgical trainee in Melbourne suggested this was the case.
“Caroline was … the daughter that you’d wish to have. She excelled at school. What she always wanted to be was a neurosurgeon,” she said.
“At the hospital Caroline ended up training at, one surgeon took her under his wing. But things got uncomfortable.
“He kept asking her back to his rooms after hours. But after this one particularly long [work] session, she felt it was rude to refuse and they ended up back in his rooms, where, of course, it was dark and there was nobody else around, and he sexually assaulted her.
“She was horrified. She ran out of the office. She didn’t tell anyone.”
‘Worst thing you could do is complain to supervising body’
Dr McMullin said the surgeon began to give Caroline bad reports and faced with the prospect of failing after years of hard work, Caroline finally complained.
After a long and gruelling legal process, Caroline won her case.
Top Comments
It's not only surgeons, it's GPs as well. I attended a pre-surgery appointment several years ago with the GP anesthetist. I'd told the surgeon that I didn't want my uterus removed; I had no problems with it, when he suggested I have it out "to save having it out later". "What, no!" was my horrified reaction. The message hadn't got through to the anesthetist, who also mentioned it. Again, I strenuously objected. His first reaction was to go troppo and pace the room, shouting at me. After around 5 minutes of this, with me standing my ground, he suddenly switched behaviours and was all over me like a rash, first swaggering up to me, standing eye to eye with me, then put his hands under my chin and pulled me up close. All behind the door of his medical room, out of sight of a Medical Board that would, undoubtedly, stand up for him. Yet another arrogant boor of a doctor with no respect for women. Not to mention the over-eagerness of surgeons to remove women's reproductive organs for insufficient reasons.
This is probably a bit off topic but I'm actually surprised that people whose job entails them to see bodies as things to fix and have to open up and cut bits out could actually still view all these parts in a sexual way anyway.