Population Characteristics
Women in Health Professions Schools
The health professions have long been characterized
by sex disparities. Some professions, such as medicine and dentistry,
have historically been dominated by males, while others, such as
nursing, have been predominantly female. Over the past several decades,
these gaps have narrowed, and in some cases have disappeared.
In 1980-81, 47.4 percent of pharmacy students
were women, while in the fall of 2004 women represented nearly two-thirds
(66.5 percent) of the students. Even in fields where men are still
the majority, the representation of female students has grown. In
1980-81, only 26.5 percent of medical students were women compared
to nearly one-half (48.7 percent) in the fall of 2004. In schools
of osteopathic medicine, women now comprise 46.9 percent of total
enrollees. Similar gains have been made in the field of dentistry,
where 43.2 percent of students were women in 2003-04 compared to
only 17.0 percent in 1980-81. By the 2004 school year, female students
represented a growing majority in a number of health professions
schools, including graduate schools of social work (83.8 percent),
physical therapy (77.9 percent), public health (69.6 percent), and
optometry (62.2 percent). Women also represent the vast majority
of enrollees in dietetics programs-in 2004, 91.1 percent of dietetics
students and interns were women. Nursing, at both the undergraduate
and graduate levels, also continues to be dominated by women, although
the proportion of students who are female is slowly declining. In
the 1980-81 academic year, 94.3 percent of nursing students were
female, while in the fall of 2004, females represented 90.8 percent
of nursing students.
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Bar Chart: Women in
Schools for Selected Health Professions, 1980-81 and 2003-04
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