Department of Emergency Medicine, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Peoria, IL.
Ann Emerg Med. 2021 Jan;77(1):117-123. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2020.03.027. Epub 2020 May 4.
Previous studies have demonstrated that a sex disparity exists in the editorial boards of select specialties. However, there are limited data with respect to emergency medicine. We seek to determine the sex distribution of editors in chief and editorial board members among emergency medicine journals.
In this cross-sectional survey, we compiled a list of all emergency medicine journals, using the Scimago Journal & Country Rank on August 13, 2019. We excluded journals that were no longer published, were not emergency medicine journals, had rotating editorial boards for each issue, or had no first names listed. We obtained the sex and editorial board role by using publicly available data on the journal Web sites. We assigned sex according to knowledge of the member or his or her online faculty profile and used the Genderize program (Genderize.io, Roskilde, Denmark) when sex could not be determined with the above-mentioned approach. We report descriptive statistics for the categoric data, stratified by position (editor in chief, editorial board member, social media editor, resident/fellow member) and country.
We identified 73 journals in Scimago; 37 met inclusion criteria, with data available to determine the sex in 99.5% of cases. There were 46 total editors in chief, with only 4 (8.7%) being women. Of 1,477 total editorial board members, only 241 were women (16.3%), with a range of 0% to 33.3% per journal. We found that 28.6% of social media editors (2/7) at 4 journals and 70% of resident or fellow editors (7/10) at 5 journals were women.
There is a notable sex disparity among emergency medicine journals' editors in chief and editorial board members. Efforts should be made to improve sex distribution among editorial boards.
先前的研究表明,在某些专业的编委会中存在性别差异。然而,关于急诊医学的相关数据有限。我们旨在确定急诊医学期刊主编和编委中的性别分布。
在这项横断面调查中,我们使用 Scimago Journal & Country Rank 于 2019 年 8 月 13 日编制了一份所有急诊医学期刊的清单。我们排除了不再出版、不是急诊医学期刊、每期有轮换编委会或没有列出第一名字的期刊。我们通过期刊网站上公开提供的数据获得性别和编委会成员身份。我们根据成员的知识或其在线教师资料来分配性别,并在无法通过上述方法确定性别的情况下使用 Genderize 程序(Genderize.io,丹麦 Roskilde)。我们报告了分类数据的描述性统计信息,按职位(主编、编委、社交媒体编辑、住院医师/研究员)和国家进行分层。
我们在 Scimago 中识别出 73 种期刊;其中 37 种符合纳入标准,99.5%的期刊数据可用于确定性别。共有 46 名主编,其中只有 4 名(8.7%)是女性。在 1,477 名编委中,只有 241 名(16.3%)是女性,每个期刊的范围从 0%到 33.3%。我们发现,在 4 种期刊的 7 名(28.6%)社交媒体编辑和 5 种期刊的 10 名(70%)住院医师/研究员中,女性比例较高。
在急诊医学期刊的主编和编委中存在显著的性别差异。应努力改善编委会中的性别分布。