Celebrating International Women’s Day: Martha Donovan Awards empower Rady women as leaders
When people hear the word “surgeon,” many still automatically picture a man, says Dr. Farhana Shariff, assistant professor of surgery in UM’s Max Rady College of Medicine.
And there are still biases – often unintentional and systemic, she says – that influence people’s perceptions of female surgeons.
Women face a double bind, Shariff says. “If you're seen as too nice, you're often assumed – because of unrecognized biases – not to be competent enough. If you exert authority, you may be seen as bossy and difficult.”
Shariff’s surgical specialty is complex abdominal and gastrointestinal tumours. Originally from Vancouver, she was educated at institutions including McGill University, the University of British Columbia and the University of Toronto before joining UM in 2021.
She is the surgical skills program director for UM surgery residents and chair of the surgical standards committee at St. Boniface Hospital.
Shariff is one of 12 faculty members or students in the Rady Faculty of Health Sciences who have received The Winnipeg Foundation Martha Donovan Women’s Leadership Development Awards in the most recent round of funding.
With International Women’s Day approaching on March 8 under the global theme “Accelerate Action,” the award recipients say the funding for leadership training is helping them to advance women’s equity in health care, health education and health research.
Shariff’s award is funding her to complete an online Women in Leadership certificate at Cornell University. One strength of the program, she says, is its emphasis on interpersonal communication.
“The operating room has some really unique communication and leadership challenges,” the surgeon says. “It's a bit of a pressure cooker ... with multiple leaders and the need to shift that leadership back and forth…. You really need to be able to adapt your own leadership style.”
The $250,000 Winnipeg Foundation Martha Donovan Fund has been supporting leadership training for Rady women since 2019. Shariff believes the support will have a lasting impact.
“The system is changing for the better. The more female leaders know about how to function and thrive, the more we can pass those tools down to the girls and women of the next generation, to equip and empower them.”
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