Department of Radiation Oncology, Penn State Cancer Institute, Hershey, Pennsylvania.
Department of Radiation Oncology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.
JAMA Netw Open. 2021 Jun 1;4(6):e2112404. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.12404.
Despite equal numbers of men and women entering medical school, women are underrepresented in the upper echelons of academic medicine and receive less compensation and research funding. Citation-related publication productivity metrics, such as the h-index, are increasingly used for hiring, salary, grants, retention, promotion, and tenure decisions. Exploring sex differences in these metrics across academic medicine provides deeper insight into why differences are observed in career outcomes.
To systematically examine the available literature on sex differences in h-index of academic faculty physicians across all medical specialties and all levels of academic rank.
Medical literature with the term h-index found in PubMed and published between January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2018, was used.
A PICOS (Population, Intervention, Comparison, and Outcomes), PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses), and MOOSE (Meta-analysis of Observational Studies in Epidemiology) selection protocol was used to find observational studies that published h-indexes for faculty physicians that were stratified by sex. Studies were excluded if they were review articles, retracted, or unavailable online. Ultimately, 14 of 786 studies (1.78%) met the inclusion criteria.
Data from 9 studies across 16 specialties were examined using weighted random-effects meta-analyses. Five studies were excluded because of overlapping specialties with another study or because they were missing appropriate statistics for the meta-analysis. Four of these studies were included in qualitative synthesis to bring the total to 13 studies.
The primary study outcome was the h-index.
The meta-analysis included 10 665 North American unique academic physicians across 9 different studies from the years 2009 to 2018. Of the 10 665 physicians, 2655 (24.89%) were women. Summary effect sizes for mean h-indexes of men and women and mean h-index difference between men and women were determined for all faculty physicians and at each academic rank. Overall, female faculty had lower h-indexes than male faculty (mean difference, -4.09; 95% CI, -5.44 to -2.73; P < .001). When adjusting for academic rank, female faculty still had lower h-indexes than male faculty at the ranks of assistant professor (mean difference, -1.3; 95% CI, -1.90 to -0.72; P < .001), associate professor (mean difference, -2.09; 95% CI, -3.40 to -0.78; P = .002), and professor (mean difference, -3.41; 95% CI, -6.24 to -0.58; P = .02).
In this systematic review and meta-analysis, women had lower h-indexes than men across most specialties and at all academic ranks, but it is unclear why these differences exist. These findings suggest that future investigation should be conducted regarding the causes of lower h-indexes in women and that interventions should be developed to provide a more equitable environment for all physicians regardless of sex.
尽管进入医学院的男女人数相同,但女性在学术医学的高层中代表性不足,并且获得的薪酬和研究资金较少。与引文相关的出版物生产力指标(如 h 指数)越来越多地用于招聘、薪资、拨款、留用、晋升和终身教职决策。探讨这些指标在整个医学领域的性别差异,可以更深入地了解为什么在职业成果方面会存在差异。
系统地检查医学专业各领域和各级学术职称的学术医师 h 指数的可用文献中存在的性别差异。
使用在 PubMed 中找到的带有 h-index 一词的医学文献,发表于 2009 年 1 月 1 日至 2018 年 12 月 31 日之间。
采用 PICOS(人群、干预、比较和结果)、PRISMA(系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目)和 MOOSE(观察性研究荟萃分析的流行病学)选择方案来寻找按性别分层的医师 h 指数的观察性研究。如果研究是评论文章、撤回或无法在线获取,则将其排除在外。最终,符合纳入标准的有 786 项研究中的 14 项(1.78%)。
使用加权随机效应荟萃分析对来自 16 个专业的 9 项研究的数据进行了检查。有 5 项研究因与另一项研究的专业重叠或因为缺乏适当的荟萃分析统计数据而被排除。其中的 4 项研究被纳入定性综合分析,从而使总数达到 13 项研究。
主要研究结果是 h 指数。
荟萃分析包括来自 2009 年至 2018 年的 9 项不同研究的 10665 名北美独特的学术医师。在这 10665 名医生中,有 2655 名(24.89%)是女性。确定了所有教师和每个学术职称的男性和女性的平均 h 指数以及男性和女性平均 h 指数之间的差异的综合效应大小。总体而言,女性教师的 h 指数低于男性教师(平均差异,-4.09;95%置信区间,-5.44 至-2.73;P<0.001)。在调整学术职称后,女性教师在助理教授(平均差异,-1.3;95%置信区间,-1.90 至-0.72;P<0.001)、副教授(平均差异,-2.09;95%置信区间,-3.40 至-0.78;P=0.002)和教授(平均差异,-3.41;95%置信区间,-6.24 至-0.58;P=0.02)的职称上的 h 指数仍低于男性教师。
在这项系统评价和荟萃分析中,女性在大多数专业和所有学术职称上的 h 指数都低于男性,但原因尚不清楚。这些发现表明,未来应该对女性 h 指数较低的原因进行进一步调查,并应该制定干预措施,为所有医生提供一个更加公平的环境,无论其性别如何。