Resnik D B
Department of Medical Humanities, East Carolina University, School of Medicine, Greenville, NC 27858-4354, USA.
Theor Med Bioeth. 1999 Jun;20(3):245-60. doi: 10.1023/a:1009989920426.
This study discusses the results of a survey of 1,800 articles published in American medical journals from 1985-1996. The study finds 9% of these articles reported research that uses only male subjects to examine medical conditions that affect both sexes; the ratio of research on female to male conditions among these articles was greater than 5:1; but 76.5% of the articles reported research that includes both male and female subjects. The study also discusses evidence that sex biases against women (and men) are decreasing. This study also offers some possible psychological, institutional, medical, and economic explanations of the sex biases in medical research published in American journals, and discusses some policy implications of sex biases in medical research. The study concludes by urging others to conduct more empirical research on sex biases in medical research.
本研究探讨了对1985年至1996年发表在美国医学期刊上的1800篇文章的调查结果。研究发现,这些文章中有9%报告的研究仅使用男性受试者来研究影响两性的医疗状况;这些文章中关于女性疾病与男性疾病的研究比例大于5:1;但76.5%的文章报告的研究包括男性和女性受试者。该研究还讨论了针对女性(和男性)的性别偏见正在减少的证据。本研究还提供了一些可能的心理、机构、医学和经济方面的解释,来说明美国期刊上发表的医学研究中的性别偏见,并讨论了医学研究中性别偏见的一些政策影响。该研究最后敦促其他人对医学研究中的性别偏见进行更多实证研究。