Racial, Gender, and Size Bias in a Medical Graphical Abstract Gallery: A Content Analysis.

IF 2.6 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Health Equity Pub Date : 2023-09-27 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1089/heq.2023.0026
Jessica P Cerdeña, Jennifer W Tsai, Chloe Warpinski, Robert F Rosencrans, Clarence C Gravlee
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Graphical abstracts may enhance dissemination of scientific and medical research but are also prone to reductionism and bias. We conducted a systematic content analysis of the Journal of Internal Medicine (JIM) Graphical Abstract Gallery to assess for evidence of bias.

Materials and methods: We analyzed 140 graphical abstracts published by JIM between February 2019 and May 2020. Using a combination of inductive and deductive approaches, we developed a set of codes and code definitions for thematic, mixed-methods analysis.

Results: We found that JIM graphical abstracts disproportionately emphasized male (59.5%) and light-skinned (91.3%) bodies, stigmatized large body size, and overstated genetic and behavioral causes of disease, even relative to the articles they purportedly represented. Whereas 50.7% of the graphical surface area was coded as representing genetic factors, just 0.4% represented the social environment.

Discussion: Our analysis suggests evidence of bias and reductionism promoting normative white male bodies, linking large bodies with disease and death, conflating race with genetics, and overrepresenting genes while underrepresenting the environment as a driver of health and illness. These findings suggest that uncritical use of graphical abstracts may distort rather than enhance our understanding of disease; harm patients who are minoritized by race, gender, or body size; and direct attention away from dismantling the structural barriers to health equity.

Conclusion: We recommend that journals develop standards for mitigating bias in the publication of graphical abstracts that (1) ensure diverse skin tone and gender representation, (2) mitigate weight bias, (3) avoid racial or ethnic essentialism, and (4) attend to sociostructural contributors to disease.

医学图形摘要库中的种族、性别和尺寸偏见:内容分析。
引言:图形摘要可以促进科学和医学研究的传播,但也容易出现还原论和偏见。我们对《内科学杂志》(JIM)的图形摘要库进行了系统的内容分析,以评估偏见的证据。材料和方法:我们分析了JIM在2019年2月至2020年5月期间发表的140篇图形摘要。使用归纳和演绎方法的组合,我们开发了一套用于主题、混合方法分析的代码和代码定义。结果:我们发现,JIM图形摘要过分强调男性(59.5%)和浅色皮肤(91.3%)的身体,污蔑大体型,并夸大了疾病的遗传和行为原因,甚至与它们声称代表的文章相比也是如此。50.7%的图形表面积被编码为代表遗传因素,而只有0.4%代表社会环境。讨论:我们的分析表明,有证据表明,偏见和还原论促进了规范的白人男性身体,将大型身体与疾病和死亡联系起来,将种族与遗传学混为一谈,过度表达基因,而低估了环境作为健康和疾病驱动因素的作用。这些发现表明,不加批判地使用图形摘要可能会扭曲而不是增强我们对疾病的理解;伤害按种族、性别或体型划分的少数民族患者;以及将注意力从消除健康公平的结构性障碍上转移开。结论:我们建议期刊制定减少图形摘要出版中偏见的标准,(1)确保不同的肤色和性别代表,(2)减轻体重偏见,(3)避免种族或民族本质主义,(4)关注疾病的社会结构因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health Equity
Health Equity Social Sciences-Health (social science)
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
3.70%
发文量
97
审稿时长
24 weeks
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