M. A. Brown, M. K. Erdman, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, LAC+USC Medical Center, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
A. M. Munger, Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2020 Jul;478(7):1542-1552. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000000849.
BACKGROUND: The most recent demographic data reveal that only 6.5% of practicing orthopaedic surgeons are women, and as far as we know, only two women have held chair positions in academic orthopaedic programs in the United States. Furthermore, orthopaedic surgery is the least gender-diverse speciality recognized by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. The factors that contribute to the lack of gender diversity in orthopaedics remain ill-defined. A lag in publication productivity may be a barrier to career advancement for women orthopaedic surgeons, but this has not been well studied. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) What is the proportion of orthopaedic studies published in six major orthopaedic journals by women first or senior authors from 1987 to 2017? (2) Did men and women orthopaedic surgeons publish in equal proportions during the study period (measured in 5-year intervals)? (3) Are there differences in the characteristics (such as study type or subject focus) of orthopaedic publications authored by women and those authored by men? (4) Has the increased proportion of practicing women orthopaedic surgeons been matched by an equal increase in authorship by women orthopaedic surgeons during the study timeframe? METHODS: A cross-sectional analysis was designed to characterize trends in authorship of orthopaedic studies by women over time. All publications from the first issue of each of six major orthopaedic journals were evaluated at seven time points (1987, 1992, 1997, 2002, 2007, 2012, and 2017). Characteristics of each first and senior author (including gender, academic degree, and specialty), and study category of each publication were collected. Articles for which this information was not available were excluded (35 of 1073, or 3.3% of published studies, no difference in proportion of excluded studies between journals). The proportions of women and men authors were compared at the seven time points and for six study categories (basic science, case report/technique article, clinical medicine, economics/practice management, editorial content [including true editorials, letters to the editor, commentaries, and book reviews] and review/meta-analysis) using a Fisher's exact test or chi-squared analysis. We compared the rates of change of women authorship, practicing women orthopaedic surgeons, and women orthopaedic residents during the study period using an ANOVA and Tukey's honestly significant difference (HSD) post-hoc test with Cohen's D measure of effect size. RESULTS: From 1987 to 2017, only 1.7% (15 of 880) of senior authors and 4.4% (46 of 1038) of first authors of orthopaedic publications were women orthopaedic surgeons. Based on population proportions (that is, percent of practicing women orthopaedic surgeons compared with men), the proportion of women senior authors was less than would be expected at each time point after 1987 compared with men. There were no differences between the types of studies authored by women or men. Finally, during the study period, the rate of growth of women senior authorship was less than the rates of growth of both practicing women orthopaedic surgeons (d = 5.3, 95% CI, 4.8-5.6; p = 0.023) and women first authorship (d = -4.3, 95% CI -4.6 to -3.6, p = 0.030; estimated mean 3.3, p = 0.013). CONCLUSIONS: Women orthopaedic surgeons published a small proportion of academic orthopaedic research from 1987 to 2017, and women senior authors consistently published less than would be expected based on their population proportion compared with men orthopaedic surgeons. Furthermore, the growth of practicing women orthopaedic surgeons has not been matched by growth in senior authorship by women over the same timeframe. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This discrepancy warrants further exploration because a low rate of publication may negatively impact the career advancement of women orthopaedic surgeons and contribute to the overall lack of gender diversity in orthopaedics. We suggest that journals and publishers review their editorial processes to ensure blinding of author names during peer review and editorial decision-making, and to disclose those review processes to authors. We also suggest that institutions encourage women trainees and junior faculty to participate in mentorship programs and specialty societies that promote academic productivity.
背景:最近的人口统计数据显示,只有 6.5% 的执业骨科医生是女性,据我们所知,在美国,只有两位女性曾担任过学术骨科项目的主席职位。此外,骨科手术是由美国研究生医学教育认证委员会认可的性别多样性最小的专业。导致骨科领域性别多样性不足的因素仍不明确。女性骨科医生在出版物生产力方面的滞后可能是其职业发展的障碍,但这尚未得到充分研究。
问题/目的:(1) 1987 年至 2017 年期间,六位主要骨科期刊中由女性第一或资深作者发表的骨科研究比例是多少?(2) 在研究期间(以 5 年为间隔测量),男女骨科医生的发表比例是否相等?(3) 女性和男性作者发表的骨科出版物在特征(如研究类型或主题重点)上是否存在差异?(4) 在研究期间,女性骨科医生的比例是否与女性骨科医生的作者比例相等增加?
方法:采用横断面分析方法,对女性在不同时间点发表的骨科研究进行趋势分析。在七个时间点(1987 年、1992 年、1997 年、2002 年、2007 年、2012 年和 2017 年)评估了六位主要骨科期刊第一期的所有出版物。收集了每位第一和资深作者(包括性别、学位和专业)以及每篇出版物的研究类别。对于这些信息不可用的文章(1073 篇中的 35 篇,即发表研究的 3.3%,期刊之间排除研究的比例无差异)进行了排除。使用 Fisher 精确检验或卡方分析比较七个时间点和六个研究类别(基础科学、病例报告/技术文章、临床医学、经济学/实践管理、编辑内容[包括真实社论、读者来信、评论和书评]和综述/荟萃分析)中女性和男性作者的比例。我们使用方差分析和 Tukey 的 HSD 事后检验以及 Cohen's D 测量效应大小比较了研究期间女性作者、执业女性骨科医生和女性骨科住院医师的增长率。
结果:从 1987 年至 2017 年,只有 1.7%(880 名高级作者中的 15 名)和 4.4%(1038 名第一作者中的 46 名)是女性骨科医生。根据人口比例(即与男性相比,执业女性骨科医生的比例),与男性相比,1987 年以后每个时间点女性高级作者的比例都低于预期。女性或男性作者撰写的研究类型没有差异。最后,在研究期间,女性高级作者的增长率低于女性执业骨科医生(d = 5.3,95%CI,4.8-5.6;p = 0.023)和女性第一作者的增长率(d = -4.3,95%CI -4.6 至 -3.6,p = 0.030;估计平均值为 3.3,p = 0.013)。
结论:从 1987 年至 2017 年,女性骨科医生发表的学术骨科研究比例较小,与男性骨科医生相比,女性高级作者的发表比例一直低于预期。此外,在同一时期,女性执业骨科医生的增长并未与女性高级作者的增长相匹配。
临床意义:这种差异值得进一步探讨,因为出版率低可能会对女性骨科医生的职业发展产生负面影响,并导致骨科领域整体性别多样性不足。我们建议期刊和出版商审查他们的编辑流程,以确保在同行评审和编辑决策过程中对作者姓名进行盲法处理,并向作者公开这些评审流程。我们还建议机构鼓励女性学员和初级教员参与导师计划和专业学会,以促进学术生产力。
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2020-7
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2021-1-1
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2023-8-16
J Am Acad Orthop Surg. 2022-6-15
J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev. 2025-5-9
Shoulder Elbow. 2025-1-24
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2025-1-22
Surg Endosc. 2025-2
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2025-5-1
JB JS Open Access. 2024-12-3
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2024-12-1
JB JS Open Access. 2024-7-23
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2019-3
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2018-9-5
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2017-2
Ophthalmology. 2016-5-22
Gastrointest Endosc. 2015-4-14
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2013-10-2