An Investigation of Gender Representation and Collaboration in Academic Plastic Surgery Research.

IF 0.7 4区 医学 Q4 SURGERY
Plastic surgery Pub Date : 2025-02-01 Epub Date: 2023-08-07 DOI:10.1177/22925503231190928
Sahil Chawla, Janani Rajendra, Thanansayan Dhivagaran, Jeffrey Ding, Kathryn V Isaac, Faisal Khosa
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Gender disparities in academic leadership positions may be influenced by several factors, including research productivity. We aimed to describe the publication gender gap in major plastic surgery journals, assess gender-related and gender-neutral research publications, and identify any potential gender disparities associated with publication characteristics. Methods: For this cross-sectional study, we reviewed all original research publications in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, JAMA Facial Plastic Surgery, and Aesthetic Surgery Journal from 2014 through 2018. Genderize.io was used to identify the gender of all authors. Each publication was classified as either gender-neutral, transgender health, women's health, or men's health-related based on the article's content. Results: Of the 12,718 authors across 2234 publications analysed, females were first authors in 30%, last authors in 17%, and all authors in 27%. Among the publications, 1782 (79.8%) were focused on gender-neutral, 419 (18.8%) on women's health, 18 (0.8%) on transgender health, and 15 (0.7%) on men's health. Male first authors were more likely to be associated with women's and transgender health articles (OR [95% CI]  =  1.4 [1.1-1.8] and OR [95% CI]  =  51.0 [47-55], p < .001) and had a higher mean number of citations compared to gender-neutral articles (p < .001). Male first authors were more likely to be associated with women's and transgender health articles (OR [95% CI]  =  1.4 [1.1-1.8] and OR [95% CI]  =  51.0 [47-55], p < .001) and had a higher mean number of citations compared to gender-neutral articles (p < .001). Conclusion: The publication gender gap persists in academic plastic surgery. The academic community should continue to prioritize addressing gender disparity from the perspective of research productivity.

整形外科学术研究中的性别代表与合作调查
背景:学术领导职位中的性别差异可能受到几个因素的影响,包括研究生产力。我们旨在描述主要整形外科杂志上的出版物性别差距,评估与性别相关和性别中立的研究出版物,并确定与出版物特征相关的任何潜在性别差异。方法:在这项横断面研究中,我们回顾了2014年至2018年《整形与重建外科》、《美国医学会杂志面部整形外科》和《美容外科杂志》上的所有原创研究出版物。Genderize.io用于识别所有作者的性别。根据文章内容,每份出版物都被分为中性、跨性别健康、女性健康或男性健康。结果:在分析的2234篇出版物的12718位作者中,女性是第一作者,占30%,最后作者占17%,所有作者占27%。在这些出版物中,1782份(79.8%)关注中性,419份(18.8%)关注女性健康,18份(0.8%)关注跨性别健康,15份(0.7%)关注男性健康。男性第一作者更有可能与女性和跨性别健康文章有关(OR[95%CI]  =  1.4[1.1-1.8]和OR[95%CI]  =  51.0[47-55],p < .001),并且与中性文章相比具有更高的平均引用次数(p < .001)。男性第一作者更有可能与女性和跨性别健康文章有关(OR[95%CI]  =  1.4[1.1–1.8]和OR[95%CI]  =  51.0[47-55],p < .001),并且与中性文章相比具有更高的平均引用次数(p < .001)。结论:整形外科学术期刊中存在性别差异。学术界应继续从研究生产力的角度优先解决性别差异问题。
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
Plastic surgery
Plastic surgery Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
73
期刊介绍: Plastic Surgery (Chirurgie Plastique) is the official journal of the Canadian Society of Plastic Surgeons, the Canadian Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, Group for the Advancement of Microsurgery, and the Canadian Society for Surgery of the Hand. It serves as a major venue for Canadian research, society guidelines, and continuing medical education.
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