Feramisco Jamison D, Leitenberger Justin J, Redfern Shelley I, Bian Aihua, Xie Xian-Jin, Resneck Jack S
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas, USA.
J Am Acad Dermatol. 2009 Jan;60(1):63-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jaad.2008.06.044.
Despite a dramatic influx of female dermatologists during the last 30 years, women in academic dermatology departments remain relatively clustered in junior faculty positions. Research in other specialties showing a disparity in the academic productivity of women has led to many hypotheses regarding factors that may place them at a competitive disadvantage. It is unknown, however, whether similar differences in academic productivity might also serve as barriers to advancement in dermatology, or whether any productivity gap actually exists in this specialty that experienced a more substantial entry of women.
Because publication in peer-reviewed journals is one of the core measures of academic productivity used in the promotion process, we evaluated trends in the prevalence of female authorship in top dermatology journals during the last 3 decades.
We conducted an observational study of trends in the sex distribution of US authors in 3 prestigious general dermatology journals (in 1976, 1986, 1996, and 2006) and 3 subspecialty dermatology journals (in 2006 only). Journals were chosen based on published impact factors and citation half-lives.
During the last 3 decades, the proportion of women authoring manuscripts in the 3 major general dermatology journals increased from 12% to 48% of US-affiliated first authors (P < .001) and from 6.2% to 31% of US-affiliated senior authors (P < .001). Separate analyses by journal and by article type showed similar increases. The prevalence of female authors in subspecialty journals in 2006 was slightly more variable.
Although the publications selected for this study capture many of the most respected US journals in dermatology, they may not be representative of all journals in which dermatologists publish.
Female dermatologists are authoring publications in growing numbers that match or exceed their prevalence in the academic and overall workforce. This suggests that other factors (differences in productivity outside of the publishing arena, differences in job descriptions or opportunities, differences in career aspirations, a lack of institutional support or flexibility, or gender bias) may be associated with the ongoing reduced advancement of women to senior academic dermatology ranks relative to their male colleagues, and further research is warranted to explore these possibilities.
尽管在过去30年里女性皮肤科医生大量涌入,但学术皮肤科部门的女性仍相对集中在初级教员职位。其他专业领域的研究表明女性在学术产出方面存在差异,这引发了许多关于可能使她们处于竞争劣势的因素的假设。然而,尚不清楚学术产出方面的类似差异是否也会成为皮肤科晋升的障碍,或者在这个女性大量涌入的专业领域是否真的存在产出差距。
由于在同行评审期刊上发表文章是晋升过程中衡量学术产出的核心指标之一,我们评估了过去30年顶级皮肤科期刊中女性作者比例的变化趋势。
我们对3种著名的普通皮肤科期刊(1976年、1986年、1996年和2006年)以及3种皮肤科亚专业期刊(仅2006年)中美国作者的性别分布趋势进行了观察性研究。期刊是根据已发表的影响因子和引用半衰期来选择的。
在过去30年里,3种主要普通皮肤科期刊中女性撰写稿件的比例从美国附属第一作者的12%增至48%(P <.001),从美国附属资深作者的6.2%增至31%(P <.001)。按期刊和文章类型进行的单独分析显示出类似的增长。2006年亚专业期刊中女性作者的比例略有不同。
尽管本研究选择的出版物涵盖了许多美国备受尊敬的皮肤科期刊,但它们可能不代表皮肤科医生发表文章的所有期刊。
女性皮肤科医生发表文章的数量不断增加,与她们在学术界和整个劳动力中的比例相当或超过该比例。这表明其他因素(出版领域之外的产出差异、工作职责或机会差异、职业抱负差异、缺乏机构支持或灵活性,或性别偏见)可能与女性相对于男性同事在学术皮肤科高级职位晋升方面持续减少有关,有必要进一步研究以探索这些可能性。