Background
Studies have documented substantial salary disparities between women and men in academic medicine. While various strategies
have been proposed to increase equity, to our knowledge, no interventions have been evaluated.
Objective
This paper aims to assess the effect of an identity-conscious intervention on salary equity.
Design
This study shows comparison of adjusted annual salaries for women and men before and after an intervention.
Participants/Setting
We studied full time faculty employed in FY00 (n = 393) and FY04 (n = 462) in one College of Medicine.
Intervention
Compensation data were obtained from personnel databases for women and men, and adjusted for predictors. After verification
of data accuracy by departments, comparable individuals within the same department who had different salaries were identified.
The Dean discussed apparent disparities with department heads, and salaries were adjusted.
Measurements
Total adjusted annualized salaries were compared for men and women for the year the project began and the year after the intervention
using multivariate models. Female faculty members’ salaries were also considered as a percent of male faculty members’ salaries.
Results
Twenty-one potential salary disparities were identified. Eight women received equity adjustments to their salaries, with the
average increase being $17,323. Adjusted salaries for women as a percent of salary for men increased from 89.4% before the
intervention to 93.5% after the intervention. Disparities in compensation were no longer significant in FY2004 in basic science
departments, where women were paid 97.6% of what men were paid.
Conclusions
This study shows that gender disparities in compensation can be reduced through careful documentation, identification of comparable
individuals paid different salaries, and commitment from leadership to hold the appropriate person accountable.
KEY WORDS women - compensation - academic medicine - equity - faculty - salary