Journal of surgical education
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Gender inequality within the medical field continues to be a prominent issue, particularly for surgical specialties. The purpose of this systematic review was to evaluate the factors that influence female medical students' decision to pursue a career in surgery, including general surgery and surgical subspecialties. ⋯ This systematic review identifies mentorship, specialty exposure, nature of the surgical field, gender discrimination, and personal factors to be major determinants in female medical students' decisions to pursue a career in surgery. While factors such as inherent interest in surgery may not be easily modified, improvements in gender discrimination, access to mentorship, and specialty exposure can attract more female trainees to surgical specialties. Specifically, improving parental leave policies, reducing pregnancy-related stigma, eliminating gender-discrimination, matching medical students with role models early, and implementing outreach programs designed for women may increase students' interest in a surgical career.