How much less do women neurologists make than their male counterparts?
That’s one of the driving questions we sought to answer during a recent presentation at the Women’s Neurology Group October annual meeting.
The event, which took place in Colorado Springs, brought together women neurologists from across the country to discuss the future of the profession. During a session entitled: “Salary Transparency for Neurology: What Offcall's Data Reveals,” Offcall co-founder and CEO Jake Horowitz shared several charts showing what Offcall’s compensation data shows about neurology specifically.
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Among the topics covered during the talk were: What the gender pay gap looks like in neurology, how geography impacts neurologist pay, whether salaried, hourly, or RVU-based neurologists are more satisfied, and preliminary findings of what average salaries look like across neurology sub-specialties.
It was a closed-door session, but we thought more neurologists might be interested so with the group's permission, we’re publishing the slides below, along with a summary of some of the most revealing findings.
See below for more details.
The data was collected from anonymous salary submissions from neurologists across the country by signing up for Offcall. If you haven’t yet signed up, you can do so here (takes 2 mins).
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The first chart presents a snapshot of how much more male physicians make compared to women.
Despite controlling for years practicing and annual work hours, men make approximately 23% more on average than women.
See the chart below
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