Age discrimination at work against health-related professionals in Portugal

Work. 2021;70(3):929-935. doi: 10.3233/WOR-213612.

Abstract

Background: Age discrimination affects older and younger workers, and prevents equal access to opportunities.

Objective: This study aimed to characterize age discrimination at work in health-related professionals, and to explore its association to demographic variables.

Methods: Exploratory cross-sectional, web-based questionnaire survey, including the Workplace Age Discrimination Scale (WADS), performed amongst 369 Portuguese health-related professionals. Participants were classified into two groups: physicians (medical doctors) and non-physicians (all other health-related professions).

Results: 82%of the professionals experienced age discrimination at work, non-physicians being the ones who most often experienced it (WADS 20.1 vs. 17.6). They have been more frequently passed over for a work role, evaluated less favourably and blamed for failures or problems due to their age.

Conclusion: Non-physicians, with less experience in the profession, and with lower quality of life may experience age discrimination more frequently. They need to be closely monitored for discrimination. A key policy priority should be to plan for age diversity teams where older and younger professionals may work together and where older can teach/mentor younger colleagues.

Keywords: Ageism; health-care workers; workplace discrimination.

MeSH terms

  • Ageism*
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Humans
  • Portugal
  • Quality of Life
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Workplace