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Award-Winning California Plastic Surgeon, Dr. Heather Furnas, Offers Comprehensive Assessment of Gender Inequality In Plastic Surgery


SANTA ROSA, Calif., July 19, 2018 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Heather Furnas, MD, founder of northern California's Plastic Surgery Associates, is excited to share her newly published article, Gender Inequality for Women in Plastic Surgery: A Systematic Scoping Review. Sorting through decades of research, Dr. Furnas and a team of authors have been able to highlight the disparities between men and women working in the field of plastic surgery. Dr. Furnas' article was part of the June 2018 issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery: The Journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

Experiencing the recent shift of attention toward the underrepresentation of women in the field of plastic surgery, Dr. Furnas, along with several other experts in the field, set out to present an account of related issue in a series for Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. The milieu of contributing authors included Alexandra Bucknor MBBS, MRCS, M.Sc; Parisa Kamsli MD; Nicole Phillips MD; Irene Mathijssen MD, PhD; Hinne Rakhorst MD, PhD and Samuel Lin, MD, MBA. Dr. Furnas and team made the determination that a comprehensive review of literature is warranted as the information on this topic is disproportionately lacking.

To complete the systematic scoping review, Dr. Furnas scanned over 2,247 articles between 2016 through January 2017. Using established scoping review protocol, Dr. Furnas and team narrowed their research to 55 articles. Inclusion criteria included identification of the research question, relevant studies, study selection, data charting and the collation of results. The prime origin of these articles included the United States, Austria, France, Italy, Canada and Nigeria. The research compiled on the various articles focused on eight themes:

Dr. Furnas' scoping review is the first comprehensive assessment of the literature available on issues of women in plastic surgery. Results of this assessment shows that academic plastic surgeons are less frequently female, and that women often score less favorably when outcomes of academic success are evaluated. While overt discrimination is shied away from, the implicit bias is easily seen.

With the results from her scoping review, Dr. Furnas provides a series of tactics to increase diversity and retain women in the field of plastic surgery. Her suggestions include developing mentoring programs, assigning one person to the increase of diversity, carefully reading and writing references letters with thought to content, engaging equally with both men and women, avoiding gender-loaded terms, diversity on committees, basing promotions on the quality of research never quantity and welcoming plastic surgeon mothers. Dr. Furnas also points to areas warranting further research, the need for a large-scale analysis of gender bias and discrimination, the development of centralized pathways for workforce data collection, and a focused assessment of women as leaders in plastic surgery.

ABOUT DR. HEATHER FURNAS

Dr. Furnas is a board certified plastic surgeon, receiving her undergraduate and graduate degrees from Stanford University and her medical degree from the UCLA School of Medicine. After finishing a highly competitive plastic surgery residency at Stanford, Dr. Furnas was appointed to the plastic surgery faculty at Harvard Medical School while serving on the staff at Beth Israel Hospital. In 1992, Dr. Furnas returned to California, co-founding Plastic Surgery Associates with her husband, Francisco Canales, MD. To meet the their patient's desires for innovative noninvasive treatments, the surgeons opened Allegro MedSpa, adjacent to the Plastic Surgery Associates offices in Santa Rosa and Novato. Dr. Furnas is an avid educator, researcher and lecturer, presenting at plastic surgery conferences around the world. Dr. Furnas' research has earned her the highly distinguished Tiffany Award for best scientific presentation, presented by the Aesthetic Society Board of Directors and the Aesthetic Surgery Education and Research Foundation.

Dr. Furnas' full article, Gender Inequality for Women in Plastic Surgery: A Systematic Scoping Review, can be found online at Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, the Journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. Please contact Plastic Surgery Associates at 707.537.2111 for additional information on Dr. Furnas or Dr. Canales. Our patient coordinator will be happy to assist in scheduling an in-person or virtual consultation, as well as provide travel recommendations to Plastic Surgery Associates, located within California's wine country.

 

SOURCE Plastic Surgery Associates


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