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Women in Pharmacology. Dr Gillian Gray, University of Edinburgh. Chair BPS WiP sub-committee. SPIDER event 25th March, 2010. about the BPS why promote womens careers? initiatives: mentoring and more success? obstacles. About the British Pharmacological Society.
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Women in Pharmacology Dr Gillian Gray, University of Edinburgh. Chair BPS WiP sub-committee SPIDER event 25th March, 2010
about the BPS • why promote womens careers? • initiatives: mentoring and more • success? • obstacles
About the British Pharmacological Society • the primary learned society in the UK concerned with research into drugs and the way they work • 2651 members in UK and overseas; scientists and clinicians • approximately 1/3 are women • members carry out research in universities, the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, hospitals and health services • members teach medical students the principles of basic and clinical pharmacology, which underpin safe and effective prescribing in the NHS. • in industry and academia, members are responsible for clinical trials that translate new medicines from molecule to society. • annual turnover of £3M, small permanent staff (10) to manage activities, including scientific meeting, publications, training etc
Why support the careers of women in our discipline? Secondary analysis by UKRC, Primary source: HESA Students/Researchers in Higher Education Institutions 2003/04 Greenfield report, Nov 2002
member retired Hon fellow assoc member PG UG fellow BPS membership 2005 • students: male = female • full members, fellows: male > 3x women • women decreasing from 30’s on Women leaving pharmacology : need role models & encouragement to stay and progress
First steps: mentoring programme • pilot programme established in 2005 in partnership with UKRC • role models, encouragement, advice, career progression, work-life balance • programme aimed at women (mentee) in 25-35 year age bracket-early post-doc or equivalent • paired with matched mentor (geographical & speciality): senior lecturer equivalent or above • annual call for mentors and mentees followed by matching & mentoring training session (UKRC) • travel costs covered by BPS for training and meeting mentor
BPS mentoring programme ‘mentoring has helped me, giving me a role model who encourages me…’ ‘my mentor introduced me to grants & societies that I would not have otherwise known about’ ‘mentoring has helped me to explore other avenues for work, specifically networking with other women from both academic and industrial backgrounds’. • since have over 40mentoring pairs -representing range of BPS membership • mentoring relationship usually last 1 year or more • feedback collected from mentors and mentees
What next? 2007: establishment of Women in Pharmacology (WiP) sub-committee • terms of reference, approved by BPS council • sub-committee-under Education section • financial support for activities • administrative support • representatives invited from different sectors: academia, industry, clinical pharmacology, younger members • 1st meeting October 2007: Brain-storming: increase mentoring visability, promote role models, increase representation of women in symposia, as prize winners
Putting ideas into action: increase visability Publicity leaflet available at BPS conferences Web pages on BPS site (still hidden under Education, 2010 agenda-increase visability)
BPS had number of prizes available but few women recipients • in early 2008 Aim: raise the profile of our most successful female pharmacologists and clinical pharmacologists by introducing a prize specifically to recognize outstanding achievement in research by women in Pharmacology. • Royal Society Rosalind Franklin award • 2008: Case made to BPS Prizes and awards committee • secured 5 years funding from Pharma industry Role Models: A Prize for Women
Astra-Zeneca Prize for Women in Pharmacology 1st call for nominations, March 2009 1st recipient: Professor Julia Buckingham, Imperial College London Lecture & presentation of prize at Christmas meeting of Society, December 2009 presentation to be made available on BPS YouTube site
Increasing Diversity • although women make up 1/3 membership, relatively few women are invited to speak at BPS symposia • WiP requested that diversity guidance be supplied to symposium organisers appropriate representation of women and ethnic minorities in relation to their participation in the specific subject area (e.g. as regards invited speakers, where there is a high proportion of women in a specific field at least 30 % of the invited speakers should be women) there is a good balance between established and new investigators on the speaker list there is an attempt for broad geographical representation where possible. approved by BPS council March 2009 • this guidance is now integral aspect of the template which those bidding to host any BPS supported meeting are required to complete.
what prevents more women from becoming leaders ? • successful strategies in academia • changing Institutions: Promoting equality and diversity in R&D • the role of networking Professor Jacki Hunter Senior VP, GSK • time for discussion & reflection Promoting leadership Women in Leadership symposium, Sept 2008
10 participants (senior women, including mentors), UKRC recommended facilitator • excellent feedback, repeat planned for this year Promoting leadership Leadership workshop, June 2009 Aim:To provide women in leadership positions or aspiring to them with a forum for: • Discussion of leadership issues and networking with peers • Practical experience of developing leadership skills and leadership language in an academic environment • Personal development and career planning discussions.
Secondary analysis by UKRC, Primary source: HESA Students/Researchers in Higher Education Institutions 2008 Secondary analysis by UKRC, Primary source: HESA Students/Researchers in Higher Education Institutions 2003/04 Are things improving for Women in Pharmacology? Increased representation of women at higher levels
the future…… • improve website to increase visability • networking lunch at meetings, guest speakers, mentoring update • repeat leadership training event • preparing for leadership: younger members • ‘Effective Presentation Skills’-March 2010
Need to highlight problem within BPS • old traditional society • failure to recognise the problem • some issues with selective positive action for women Overcome: strong & respected initial leadership to lay the foundations; present a clear case for supporting the need for support of women’s careers, backed up with good data. on the whole to date the BPS have been supportive Persuading women to participate • do not volunteer, ‘not for me’, ‘no time’ Obstacles along the way Overcome: offer help with travel costs, personal calls, role models, feedback Most who do participate are very positive
Recognition for achievements • 2010 BPS becomes signatory of UKRC CEO charter • enables organisations to demonstrate a visible commitment to women in science, engineering and technology 11th March 2010, BPS CEO Kate Baillie receives CEO Charter from Di Barber, UKRC
BRITISH PHARMACOLOGICAL SOCIETY Thanks Amrita Ahluwalia-founding chair WiP committee Kate Baillie , current CEO mentors Rachel Tobell Jacki Mason