University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, Cambridge, England.
Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
J Surg Res. 2021 Sep;265:204-211. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2021.02.010. Epub 2021 May 2.
Medical and surgical fields continue to be marred by gender disparities. The "leaky pipeline" effect, representing a gradual decline in female representation along the academic ladder, has been well documented in plastic surgery. However, gender differences in abstract presentation at national plastic surgery meetings and subsequent publications remains elusive.
We reviewed abstracts presented at the 2014 and 2015 annual meetings of the American Association of Plastic Surgeons (AAPS); American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS), and the Plastic Surgery Research Council (PSRC). Several abstract characteristics including the names of the first and last authors were extracted. Genderize.io and Google search were used to identify the authors' gender.
We identified 1174 abstracts presented at the three identified meetings. Females comprised 29% of the presenters and 16% of abstract senior authors (ASAs). No gender differences were identified between the meetings, type of presentation (oral versus poster), and year of presentation. The only difference was in the subspecialty of the abstracts. Successful conversion to full-text articles was similar for male and female presenters (68% versus 62%, P = 0.065) but higher for male ASAs (68% versus 59%, P = 0.01). When an author change occurred, female presenters and ASAs were more likely to be replaced by males (P < 0.001).
Gender differences continue to be evident in academic plastic surgery with women constituting a minority of both presenters and senior authors on abstracts presented at national plastic surgery meetings. Future work should assess whether flexible and supportive work policies can foster greater female representation in academic plastic surgery.
医学和外科学领域仍然存在性别差异。“渗漏管道”效应代表了女性在学术阶梯上的代表性逐渐下降,这在整形外科学中已有充分的记录。然而,在全国整形外科学会议上的摘要展示和随后的出版物中,性别差异仍然难以捉摸。
我们回顾了 2014 年和 2015 年美国整形外科学会(AAPS)、美国整形外科学会(ASPS)和整形外科学研究委员会(PSRC)年会的摘要。提取了几个摘要特征,包括第一作者和最后作者的姓名。使用 Genderize.io 和谷歌搜索来确定作者的性别。
我们在三个会议上确定了 1174 个摘要。女性占演讲者的 29%,占高级摘要作者(ASAs)的 16%。会议、演讲类型(口头与海报)和演讲年份之间没有性别差异。唯一的区别是摘要的专业领域。男性和女性演讲者的文章全文转化率相似(68%对 62%,P=0.065),但男性 ASAs 的转化率更高(68%对 59%,P=0.01)。如果发生作者变更,女性演讲者和 ASAs 更有可能被男性取代(P<0.001)。
在学术整形外科学中,性别差异仍然明显,女性在全国整形外科学会议上的摘要展示中仅占演讲者和高级作者的少数。未来的工作应该评估灵活和支持性的工作政策是否可以促进学术整形外科学中更多的女性代表。