Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, University of Texas Southwestern, Dallas, Texas, U.S.A.
Laryngoscope. 2020 May;130(5):1144-1150. doi: 10.1002/lary.28189. Epub 2019 Jul 23.
The proportion of women specializing in otolaryngology-head and neck surgery (Oto-HNS) and seeking fellowship training has steadily increased over the last several years. In academic Oto-HNS, gender differences exist in research productivity, scholarly impact, and funding. This study aims to evaluate gender differences in academic productivity between otolaryngologists in early, mid-, and later careers stages and within various subspecialties.
Departmental websites for all Oto-HNS residency programs were accessed, and data including gender, academic rank, and fellowship training/subspecialty field was collected. Bibliometric data including h-index, publication years, number of citations, documents, and coauthors was obtained from the Scopus database. Career groups were defined as early (1-5 years), mid- (6-15 years), and later (16+ years). Continuous data was compared using the t test.
Data was collected on 1,754 academic otolaryngologists (412 women, 1,342 men). Overall, men exhibited significantly higher h-indices, number of documents, citations, and coauthors and actively published for more years compared to women (P < 0.0001 for all variables). Similar trends persisted across all subspecialties. When authors were broken down into career groups, women and men showed similar research productivity across all career groups in the subspecialties of otology, facial plastics, and rhinology; however, in head and neck, laryngology, and pediatrics, women continued to lag behind men.
This study suggests that female otolaryngologists within certain subspecialties are keeping pace with their male counterparts in publication productivity in the early career time frame. This represents a change from prior studies which have shown women to be less productive in the early career period.
NA Laryngoscope, 130:1144-1150, 2020.
在过去的几年中,专门从事耳鼻喉科-头颈外科(Oto-HNS)并寻求专科培训的女性比例稳步上升。在学术性 Oto-HNS 中,女性在研究成果、学术影响力和资金方面存在差异。本研究旨在评估耳鼻喉科医师在早期、中期和后期职业阶段以及在各个亚专业领域的学术成果中的性别差异。
访问所有耳鼻喉科住院医师计划的部门网站,并收集包括性别、学术职称和专科培训/亚专业领域在内的数据。从 Scopus 数据库中获取包括 h 指数、发表年份、引用次数、文献和共同作者在内的计量数据。将职业群体定义为早期(1-5 年)、中期(6-15 年)和晚期(16 年以上)。使用 t 检验比较连续数据。
共收集了 1754 名耳鼻喉科学术医生(412 名女性,1342 名男性)的数据。总体而言,男性的 h 指数、文献数量、引用次数和共同作者数量以及活跃发表年限均显著高于女性(所有变量的 P <0.0001)。所有亚专业均存在类似趋势。当作者按职业群体细分时,在耳鼻喉科、面部整形和鼻科学等亚专业中,女性和男性在所有职业群体中的研究成果相似;然而,在头颈、喉科学和儿科学中,女性仍落后于男性。
本研究表明,在某些亚专业中,女性耳鼻喉科医生在早期职业阶段的发表生产力方面与男性同行保持同步。这与先前研究表明女性在早期职业阶段生产力较低的研究结果不同。
无 喉科学,130:1144-1150,2020。