December 16, 2020

There is a gender imbalance on the UK dental boards.

This post is about the gender imbalance of the UK dental boards.  This is an important issue because any imbalance represents gender inequality, and is not acceptable. As 50% of registered dentists are women, we would expect a balance of genders on the various representative dental bodies. (1)

Furthermore, there are several advantages to achieving balanced boards.  In summary, inclusive and balanced boards are more likely to be effective, better able to understand their stakeholders, be open to new ideas and have broad experience. This leads to improved decision making. (2)

Importantly, there is a tendency for boards to be made up of similar members with similar backgrounds, experience and networks. If the members are homogenous, they are more likely to produce “group think”. Finally, boards must make use of the available skills within an organisation. By not utilising female talent organisations are likely to have poor performance. (2)

What did we ask?

We wanted to:

  • To identify whether there is a gender imbalance on the UK Dental Boards.
  • To discover whether this was a concern to the Chairs/Presidents of the organisations.
  • If this was a concern were there any steps that they were hoping to attempt to change the gender imbalance of their board.
What did we do?

In the first stage of the study, we carried out a cross-sectional survey of the membership of all the UK Dental Boards. We did this by reviewing information on their websites and recording the number of male/female members on their board.  We collected this data in December 2019.

When we had got this information, we contacted the Presidents/Chairs of the organisation via email and asked them the following open-ended questions.

  • Was our information on the gender balance of their board correct?
  • Does the current gender balance concern them?
  • Were they attempting to change the diversity of the board?

We sent the first emails in January 2020. This was followed by a reminder two weeks later.

We collated the information and identified the main themes of the responses.

What did we find?

Table 1 contains the information on the Boards that we approached and their gender mix.

Organisation Male Female % Female
British Dental Association 13 2 13
British Orthodontic Society 7 2 22
British Society of Paediatric Dentistry 1 8 88
Faculty of Dental Surgery England 11 7 38
Faculty of Dental Surgery Glasgow 4 4 50
Faculty of Dental Surgery Edinburgh 13 5 28
British Society of Restorative Dentistry 9 8 47
British Society of Endodontology 7 2 22
British Society of Periodontology 9 4 30
British Society of Prosthodontics 10 4 29
Faculty of General Dental Practice 10 6 38
College of General Dentistry 5 4 45
British Association for the Study of Community Dentistry 6 10 62
British Association of Oral Surgeons 6 12 67
British Society of Oral Maxillofacial surgeons 15 5 25
British Society of Oral maxillofacial pathology 8 4 33
British Society of Oral Maxillofacial radiology 6 10 62
British Society Dental Hygiene and Therapy 0 13 100
British Association of Clinical Dental Technicians 36 0 0
Society of British Dental Nurses 3 11 79
Association of Dental Implantology 14 3 18
British Association of Dental Nurses 0 4 100
General Dental Council 4 8 67
British Society of Gerodontology 3 8 72*
Society Advancement Anaesthesia 6 9 60*
British Society Disability and Oral Health 4 14 77*

This data reveals that there is a marked variation in the percentage of women on the board.  For example, only 13% of the members of the BDA PEC were women, and all the members of the board of the British Society of Dental Hygiene and Therapy were women.

Notably, only 11 out of 26 organisations had a board comprised of 50% women.

We then looked at the responses about the organisation’s concerns on the gender imbalance. We identified the following themes.

They all recognised that the gender balance of their board was necessary. Furthermore, those of which there was an imbalance drew attention to the following.

  • While they were concerned, they felt that the situation was slowly improving.
  • The gender profile of the board tended to represent the overall profile of their members.
  • In previous years their board had been balanced, and it was not correct to take a cross-sectional viewpoint.
  • At the gender mix in their membership became more balanced, they hoped that the profile of their boards would change.

When they considered methods of changing the profile of their board. Several suggested that this was difficult because members were elected and not appointed. As a result, any changes would only occur if more women stood for elections and were then voted for by the members.  Many felt that this was not under their control.

Notably, several suggested that they preferred to appoint (even though they used elections) on merit and not set a quota.

It is also worth pointing out that only two of the organisations made appointments to their boards. These were the College of General Dentistry, and the General Dental Council and their boards are balanced.

Finally, they pointed out that many women have family commitments that prevent them from volunteering for roles even when they have been encouraged to stand.

What did we think?

This is clearly a complex issue, and it is not the role of this paper to outline the potential reasons for this imbalance in detail.  It has also been covered in several publications from working groups. In summary, it appears that the background for the imbalance may be considered as:

The pipeline problem.

In effect, there may be insufficient women in the organisation to be considered for leadership positions. (3)  When we consider dentistry in the UK, while this may have been true in the past. It is certainly not the case now.  Nevertheless, this may reflect the gender imbalance in the membership of some of the boards that provided us with data.

Gender Discrimination. This remains an issue in the workplace and is commonplace.

Caregiving and “women’s choices”.

Balancing work and family responsibilities is a significant challenge for women.  Women are usually the primary caregiver for the family and spend time away from the workforce. Furthermore, they are more likely to work part-time. (3). This may be addressed by holding more virtual meetings allowing greater flexibility and enabling easier attendance and less time away from the workplace/family.

Lack of effective networks and mentors.

Women may find that networking may be confined to activities that are considered to be masculine, for example, discussions around sport. (2)

Stereotyping

Women tend to diminish their professional skills and achievements. This may lead to negative stereotyping. (4)

Solutions

Education and training

These programmes of current leaders in organisations have been shown to have some effectiveness.

Quotas

Many companies have adopted the use of quotas to address this problem.  However, this risks that women who are selected using this approach are less qualified than men. There is also the danger that people may feel their choices are restricted.

Appointments v Election

While our sample is small, we felt that it was important that the only organisations with a balanced board were those who made appointments to their board (the General Dental Council and the College of General Dentistry).  All the others elected their board members. Research on the willingness of women to stand for election to medical/dental bodies is scarce. However, it has been investigated in politics. For example, it has been suggested that women are election averse and not as willing as men to stand. (5) Importantly, some of the boards ran their elections with a paper vote, for example, the British Dental Association.  This is somewhat archaic, and we wonder if this disenfranchised the younger members of the organisations. Ironically, this is also likely to be the group that is most balanced concerning gender.

Women in leadership positions

If an organisation has women members on its board, it is more likely to attract more women to leadership roles. Ironically, one way to encourage more women to apply to be a member of a board is to increase the number of women on the board.

Conclusion
  • There is an imbalance of women on the UK Dental Boards. This is simply not equitable and is unsatisfactory.
  • While this is of concern, it is not clear whether the dental boards have a coherent plan to address this situation.
  • The UK Dental Board must take steps to rectify this situation.

A pdf of this post can be found here.

References:
  1. General Dental Council. Annual Report and Accounts 2019 [cited 2020 21 July]. Available from: https://www.gdc-uk.org/docs/default-source/annual-reports/gdc-annual-report-and-accounts-2019.pdf?sfvrsn=4cd4c002_4.
  2. Women on Boards,[Available from https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/31480/11-745-women-on-boards.pdf.
  3. Eagly AH, Karau SJ. Role congruity theory of prejudice toward female leaders. Psychol Rev. 2002;109(3):573-98.
  4. Ioannidou E, Rosania A. Under-Representation of Women on Dental Journal Editorial Boards. PLOS ONE. 2015;10(1):e0116630.
  5. Kanthak K, Woon J. Women Don’t Run? Election Aversion and Candidate Entry. American Journal of Political Science. 2015;59(3):595-612.

 

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Have your say!

  1. Should there be equal sensitivity and proportional representation regarding the LBGTQ makeup of our Boards with the reasons paralleling those of this “Conclusions”? Does any imbalance represent sexual orientation inequality?

  2. Concerning ‘Caregiving and ‘Women’s Choices’.
    In a heterosexual family, why should the caregiving responsibilities always fall on the women in the relationship? I think the time has come for employers and others to recognise that caregiving in a family should be a shared responsibility between the male and female partners in the long term.
    If this issue was resolved, women would have the same opportunities for Leadership as men

  3. I question two premises of the discussion here. First, is it really unacceptable to have an imbalance? Second, should we “expect a balance of genders on our various representative bodies” due to the fact that 50% of registered dentists are women?

    Regarding the first premise: Research conducted by consulting or financial firms or government bodies is generally not as rigorous as peer-reviewed academic research. I point to two rigorous meta-analyses, which indicate that board gender diversity either has a very weak relationship with board performance or no relationship at all: https://journals.aom.org/doi/abs/10.5465/amj.2013.0319 and https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4473005/.

    Regarding the second premise: To say that we should expect 50% of board members to be women merely because 50% of registered dentists are women represents a univariate analysis. Any sociologist worth his/her salt would never do a univariate analysis. For example, analyzing the percentages of women in any given position should take into account, not just sex, but age and personality traits and the choices that people make. I’m sure that a sociologist would know many additional variables which could be considered. You discuss these issues, but it still seems to be a basic premise which I see as questionable.

  4. Not just in the UK, Kevin!

  5. Why not equal representation of left handed people or gingers?
    Ludicrous neo-Marxist tripe, reducing people to their immutable characteristics.

  6. Interesting post, I have some thoughts to add on the following quote:

    “Women tend to diminish their professional skills and achievements. This may lead to negative stereotyping. (4)”

    -I have read some books that address this point (****How Women Rise – Shelly Helgesen***** is great, it depicts the different ways that women think when approaching higher up positions). I think an interesting follow up question is – why? Why do women diminish themselves? -Especially when it does not benefit their career path.

    I would argue that women diminish themselves when they perceive it will make them more palatable. As a confident woman, you may be tagged as bossy – not as a leader, or as emotional – not as passionate, or as rude – not as honest. These fears can sometimes outweigh the drive to advance our careers or to sit on a board. As young women, we often got ahead in our early careers by making ourselves more palatable.. that is a difficult gear to switch as we mature. And why break this mould when it is socially acceptable for us to stay in middle- lower positions within an organization? Even smiled upon when in the name of raising family?

    Shelly Helgesen also makes the argument that women tend not to speak up until they have all of the details and facts memorized. They worry that if they miss a piece of information, or over state something, it will raise doubt from others and diminish their reputation. While an established board member may not fear confident statements because their reputation will carry them through, a female member may not feel they have this luxury. It can be exhausting to be this prepared, and this can be a mental barrier for pursuing higher positions.

    To me, gender imbalance in the workplace and on boards stems from societal pressures and stereotypes projected onto women that are often difficult for them to recognize, let alone dismantle. The workplace inequality issue can never be boiled down to “having kids and a family,” as gender issues also affect women without families. We need to keep asking “why” and teaching our children to ask “why” before stereotypical thinking becomes hidden within their subconscious and manifests in their actions.

    • Hi Emily, these are really thoughtful comments and they provide me with very useful information and perceptions on this problem. Thanks for sharing. Best wishes: Kevin

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