Participant diversity in ACER: 2010–2022

IF 3 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Heather A. Kissel, Ga Hee Lee, Sara McFarland, Dexton Berger, Elizabeth Enneking, Jenna Dunham, Ty Brumback
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Increasing diversity has become a priority for all fields working with human subjects due to historic exclusions and misrepresentations of participants with minoritized identities. To create a more representative and generalizable science of alcohol use, the Research Society on Alcohol (RSA) and its official journal, Alcohol: Clinical and Experimental Research (ACER), have increasingly incorporated diversity and inclusion into their posted values and programming.

Methods

We analyzed the content of articles published in ACER from 2010 through 2022 (6 years before and after the formation of RSA's Diversity Committee) to assess the reporting of participants' demographic information and whether there has been increased inclusion of diverse samples in alcohol research over time. Our team screened 3292 abstracts for data extraction; studies were included if they were primary analyses of data collected from human subjects (n = 1043).

Results

Reporting of all demographic variables increased over time, with significant increases in reporting for race/ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status (SES), income, and educational attainment. Demographic variables were also increasingly used in analyses. However, representation of research outside the United States diminished significantly over time.

Conclusions

We provide recommended journal article reporting standards for ACER to continue the positive progress in reporting demographics in alcohol research and facilitate meta-analyses examining demographic modulation and the impact of social determinants of health.

Abstract Image

ACER 参与者的多样性:2010-2022 年
由于历史上对少数身份参与者的排斥和误解,提高多样性已成为所有以人为研究对象的领域的首要任务。为了建立更具代表性和普适性的酒精使用科学,酒精研究协会(RSA)及其官方期刊《酒精:临床与实验研究》(ACER)越来越多地将多样性和包容性纳入其中:临床与实验研究》(ACER)越来越多地将多样性和包容性纳入其发布的价值观和计划中。
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CiteScore
5.40
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