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新冠疫情期间发表文章的作者性别差异:对高影响力心脏病学期刊的文献计量学分析。

Gender Differences in Publication Authorship During COVID-19: A Bibliometric Analysis of High-Impact Cardiology Journals.

机构信息

Division of Cardiology Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York NY.

Department of Medicine Brigham and Women's HospitalHarvard Medical School Boston MA.

出版信息

J Am Heart Assoc. 2021 Feb;10(5):e019005. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.120.019005. Epub 2021 Feb 23.

Abstract

Background The purpose of this study was to examine gender differences in authorship of manuscripts in select high-impact cardiology journals during the early coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Methods and Results All manuscripts published between March 1, 2019 to June 1, 2019 and March 1, 2020 to June 1, 2020 in 4 high-impact cardiology journals (, , , and ) were identified using bibliometric data. Authors' genders were determined by matching first name with predicted gender using a validated multinational database (Genderize.io) and manual adjudication. Proportions of women and men first, co-first, senior, and co-senior authors, manuscript types, and whether the manuscript was COVID-19 related were recorded. In 2019, women were first authors of 176 (22.3%) manuscripts and senior authors of 99 (15.0%) manuscripts. In 2020, women first authored 230 (27.4%) manuscripts and senior authored 138 (19.3%) manuscripts. Proportions of woman first and senior authors were significantly higher in 2020 compared with 2019. Women were more likely to be first authors if the manuscript's senior author was a woman (33.8% for woman first/woman senior versus 23.4% for woman first/man senior; <0.001). Women were less likely to be first authors of COVID-19-related original research manuscripts (=0.04). Conclusions Representation of women as key authors of manuscripts published in major cardiovascular journals increased during the early COVID-19 pandemic compared with similar months in 2019. However, women were significantly less likely to be first authors of COVID-19-related original research manuscripts. Future investigation into the gender-disparate impacts of COVID-19 on academic careers is critical.

摘要

背景

本研究旨在探讨在新冠疫情早期,选择的高影响力心脏病学期刊中,论文作者的性别差异。

方法和结果

使用文献计量学数据,确定了 2019 年 3 月 1 日至 2019 年 6 月 1 日和 2020 年 3 月 1 日至 2020 年 6 月 1 日期间,4 种高影响力心脏病学期刊(Circulation、JAMA Cardiology、JACC 和 European Heart Journal)发表的所有手稿。通过使用经过验证的跨国数据库(Genderize.io)和手动裁决,将第一作者的名字与预测的性别进行匹配,以确定作者的性别。记录女性和男性第一作者、共同第一作者、资深作者和共同资深作者的比例、手稿类型,以及手稿是否与 COVID-19 相关。2019 年,女性是 176 篇(22.3%)手稿的第一作者和 99 篇(15.0%)手稿的资深作者。2020 年,女性第一作者 230 篇(27.4%),资深作者 138 篇(19.3%)。与 2019 年相比,2020 年女性第一作者和资深作者的比例显著更高。如果资深作者是女性,女性更有可能成为第一作者(女性第一/女性资深的比例为 33.8%,女性第一/男性资深的比例为 23.4%;<0.001)。女性不太可能成为 COVID-19 相关原始研究手稿的第一作者(=0.04)。

结论

与 2019 年同期相比,在新冠疫情早期,主要心血管期刊发表的论文中,女性作为主要作者的比例有所增加。然而,女性成为 COVID-19 相关原始研究手稿第一作者的可能性显著降低。未来需要对 COVID-19 对学术生涯的性别差异影响进行调查。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/e93a/8174290/84bfc9f4de99/JAH3-10-e019005-g001.jpg

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