牙科劳动力中的性别不平等:全球视角

Q1 Medicine
Tamanna Tiwari, C. L. Randall, L. Cohen, J. Holtzmann, Jennifer Webster-Cyriaque, S. Ajiboye, L. Schou, M. Wandera, K. Ikeda, M. F. D. L. Navarro, M. Feres, Hoda Abdellatif, E. Al-Madi, S. Tubert-jeannin, C. H. Fox, Effie Ioannidou, Rena N. D'Souza
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引用次数: 26

摘要

本综述的目的是调查全球牙科学术研究的多样性和包容性的增长,重点是性别平等。本综述采用了多种研究方法,包括对文献的广泛回顾,对世界各地牙科学术领导职位的关键线人的参与,以及对来自各种国家和国际组织的当前数据的回顾。结果提供了目前在牙科学术和研究中持续存在的性别不平等的证据。尽管北美和欧洲两个人口最多的国家(英国和法国)牙科毕业生的性别差距已经缩小,但在欧洲、大洋洲、亚洲和非洲各国,女性占注册牙医的30%至40%。在全球牙科学术领域,研究发现,在美国、英国、欧盟的几个国家、日本和沙特阿拉伯,更大的性别不平等与更高的学术和领导职位有关。在牙科研究领域,进一步的差异被注意到,在欧盟,女性占牙科研究人员的33%,北美为35%,巴西为55%,日本为25%。据报道,家庭和社会压力、获得研究经费的机会有限、缺乏指导和领导力培训机会也导致了性别不平等。为了继续推进牙科学术和研究中的性别平等,应努力收集和公开传播关于性别分布的数据。这些证据驱动的信息将指导未来战略的选择和促进牙科劳动力性别平等的最佳做法,这为牙科专业提供了研究人员和学者的主要渠道。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Gender Inequalities in the Dental Workforce: Global Perspectives
The aim of this review is to investigate the growth of diversity and inclusion in global academic dental research with a focus on gender equality. A diverse range of research methodologies were used to conduct this review, including an extensive review of the literature, engagement of key informants in dental academic leadership positions around the world, and review of current data from a variety of national and international organizations. Results provide evidence of gender inequalities that currently persist in dental academics and research. Although the gender gap among graduating dental students in North America and the two most populous countries in Europe (the United Kingdom and France) has been narrowed, women make up 30% to 40% of registered dentists in countries throughout Europe, Oceania, Asia, and Africa. In academic dentistry around the globe, greater gender inequality was found to correlate with higher ranking academic and leadership positions in the United States, United Kingdom, several countries in European Union, Japan, and Saudi Arabia. Further disparities are noted in the dental research sector, where women make up 33% of dental researchers in the European Union, 35% in North America, 55% in Brazil, and 25% in Japan. Family and societal pressures, limited access to research funding, and lack of mentoring and leadership training opportunities are reported as also contributing to gender inequalities. To continue advancing gender equality in dental academia and research, efforts should be geared toward the collection and public dissemination of data on gender-specific distributions. Such evidence-driven information will guide the selection of future strategies and best practices for promoting gender equity in the dental workforce, which provides a major pipeline of researchers and scholars for the dental profession.
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来源期刊
Advances in Dental Research
Advances in Dental Research Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
8.20
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