From the Department of Surgery, University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, VA.
J Am Coll Surg. 2022 Apr 1;234(4):624-631. doi: 10.1097/XCS.0000000000000089.
Women surgeons face numerous barriers to career advancement. Inequitable citation of surgical literature may represent a contributing factor to gender disparities in academic surgery.
This was a cross-sectional analysis of publications from 50 top-ranking surgery journals in 2017 and 2018, as defined by the 2019 InCites Journal Citation Reports. The citation rate of publications by women vs men first authors was compared. Similarly, the citation rate of publications by men vs women last authors was also compared. Adjusted regression analyses of citation rates accounted for the time interval since publication as well as the journal within which the article was published, among other potential confounding factors.
A total of 19,084 publications from 48 surgery journals with a median (interquartile range) of 8 (4 to 15) citations contributing to a median (interquartile range) Journal Impact Factor of 4.0 (3.4 to 4.6) were analyzed. Compared with man-first author publications, woman-first author publications demonstrated a 9% lower citation rate (incidence rate ratio 0.91, p < 0.001). Similarly, compared with publications by man-last authors, woman-last author publications demonstrated a 4% lower citation rate (incidence rate ratio 0.96, p = 0.03). These associations persisted after multivariable adjustment for additional confounding factors, however, not on sensitivity analysis of 24 of the highest-ranking journals.
Among top-tier surgical journals, publications by women-first and -last authors were less cited compared with publications by men-first and -last authors, but not among the highest-tier surgical journals. Gender bias may exist in the citation of surgical research, contributing to gender disparities in academic surgery.
女性外科医生在职业发展上面临着诸多障碍。外科文献的引用不公平可能是学术外科领域性别差异的一个促成因素。
这是对 2017 年和 2018 年 50 种顶级外科期刊(由 2019 年 InCites 期刊引文报告定义)的出版物进行的横断面分析。比较了女性第一作者和男性第一作者发表的论文的引用率。同样,比较了男性最后作者和女性最后作者发表的论文的引用率。引用率的调整回归分析考虑了发表后的时间间隔以及文章发表的期刊等其他潜在混杂因素。
共分析了来自 48 种外科期刊的 19084 篇出版物,中位数(四分位距)为 8(4 至 15)篇引文,中位数(四分位距)期刊影响因子为 4.0(3.4 至 4.6)。与男性第一作者的论文相比,女性第一作者的论文引用率低 9%(发病率比 0.91,p < 0.001)。同样,与男性最后作者的论文相比,女性最后作者的论文引用率低 4%(发病率比 0.96,p = 0.03)。这些关联在调整了其他混杂因素后仍然存在,但在对 24 种排名最高的期刊进行敏感性分析后则不然。
在顶级外科期刊中,与男性第一作者和最后作者的论文相比,女性第一作者和最后作者的论文引用率较低,但在最高级别的外科期刊中则不然。外科研究的引用可能存在性别偏见,这导致学术外科领域的性别差异。