Elfaki Lina A, Luc Jessica G Y, Antonoff Mara B, Cooke David T, Arora Rakesh C, Stamp Nikki, Varghese Thomas K, Ouzounian Maral
Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Peter Munk Cardiac Centre, Toronto General Hospital and the University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
JTCVS Open. 2022 Sep;11:265-271. doi: 10.1016/j.xjon.2022.05.005. Epub 2022 May 13.
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic negatively impacted cardiothoracic (CT) surgery, with changes in clinical, academic, and personal responsibilities. We hypothesized that the pandemic may disproportionately impact female academic CT surgeons, accentuating preexisting sex disparities. This study assessed sex differences in authorship of 2 major CT surgery journals during the early part of the COVID-19 pandemic.
All accepted submissions to and between April and August of 2019 and the same period in 2020 were reviewed. Article type and author characteristics were obtained from the journals. Author sex was predicted using a validated multinational database (Genderize.io) and verified with authors' institutional and public professional profiles.
In total, 1106 submissions were accepted during the 2019 period, whereas 900 articles (18.6% decrease) were accepted during the same period in 2020. Original research articles comprised 33.3% of the 2019 articles but only 4.9% of the 2020 articles. Female authors contributed to 39.3% (23.1% original research and 16.2% nonoriginal articles) and 29.4% (3.3% original research and 26.1% nonoriginal articles) of articles during the 2019 and 2020 periods, respectively. This represents a marked change in the type of articles that female authors contributed to.
Early on during the COVID-19 pandemic, the type of articles accepted, and authorship demographic changed. There was a decrease in contribution of female-authored CT surgery articles submitted to both journals, especially for original research. Future research will elucidate the long-term impact of the pandemic on sex disparities in academic productivity.
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行对心胸外科(CT)手术产生了负面影响,临床、学术和个人职责都发生了变化。我们推测,这场大流行可能对女性学术CT外科医生产生不成比例的影响,加剧了原有的性别差异。本研究评估了在COVID-19大流行早期,两家主要CT外科手术期刊的作者性别差异。
对2019年4月至8月以及2020年同期提交给《》和《》的所有已接受稿件进行了审查。文章类型和作者特征来自期刊。使用经过验证的跨国数据库(Genderize.io)预测作者性别,并通过作者的机构和公开专业资料进行验证。
2019年期间共接受了1106篇投稿,而2020年同期接受了900篇文章(减少了18.6%)。原创研究文章在2019年的文章中占33.3%,但在2020年的文章中仅占4.9%。女性作者在2019年和2020年期间分别贡献了39.3%(原创研究占23.1%,非原创文章占16.2%)和29.4%(原创研究占3.3%,非原创文章占26.1%)的文章。这代表了女性作者所投稿文章类型的显著变化。
在COVID-19大流行早期,接受的文章类型和作者构成发生了变化。提交给这两家期刊的女性作者撰写的CT外科手术文章数量有所减少,尤其是原创研究文章。未来的研究将阐明这场大流行对学术生产力性别差异的长期影响。