The Pipeline Still Leaks and More Than You Think: A Status Report on Gender Diversity in Biomedical Engineering
Author(s)
Chesler, Naomi C.; Barabino, Gilda; Bhatia, Sangeeta N.; Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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While the percentage of women in biomedical engineering is higher than in many other technical fields, it is far from being in proportion to the US population. The decrease in the proportion of women and underrepresented minorities in biomedical engineering from the bachelors to the masters to the doctoral levels is evidence of a still leaky pipeline in our discipline. In addition, the percentage of women faculty members at the assistant, associate and full professor levels remain disappointingly low even after years of improved recruitment of women into biomedical engineering at the undergraduate level. Worse, the percentage of women graduating with undergraduate degrees in biomedical engineering has been decreasing nationwide for the most recent three year span for which national data are available. Increasing diversity in biomedical engineering is predicted to have significant research and educational benefits. The barriers to women's success in biomedical engineering and strategies for overcoming these obstacles—and fixing the leaks in the pipeline—are reviewed.
Date issued
2010-02Department
Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer ScienceJournal
Annals of Biomedical Engineering
Publisher
Biomedical Engineering Society
Citation
Chesler, Naomi C. et al. "The Pipeline Still Leaks and More Than You Think: A Status Report on Gender Diversity in Biomedical Engineering." Annals of Biomedical Engineering, Feb.(2010) ©2010 Biomedical Engineering Society.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1521-6047
0090-6964