Jacobs Jeremy W, Adkins Brian D, Bibb Lorin A, Booth Garrett S
Department of Laboratory Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Department of Pathology, Division of Transfusion Medicine and Hemostasis, University of Texas Southwestern, Dallas, TX, USA.
Curr Med Res Opin. 2023 Mar;39(3):383-386. doi: 10.1080/03007995.2023.2177381. Epub 2023 Feb 14.
Although diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives are progressively being implemented across various arenas in academic medicine, biomedical research, and healthcare, significant inequities throughout medicine and biomedical research remain. One means by which to rectify these long-standing inequities is through the implementation of a position dedicated to DEI among journal editorial boards; thus, we sought to assess the extent to which this position has been implemented among high-impact biomedical research journals.
We performed a cross-sectional analysis of the editorial boards of the top 100 journals by impact factor (IF) across 30 medical specialties. All editorial board positions (editors-in-chief, deputy, associate, and assistant editors, as well as editorial and advisory board members) were included. We also assessed the proportion of other named-position editors (i.e. social media and statistics editors), and compared these to the proportion of DEI editors.
Among the 100 highest IF biomedical journals (range: 12.035-508.702), 6 (6%) have a DEI editorial position. In contrast, 25 (25%) and 35 (35%) journals have at least 1 social media or statistics editorial position, respectively. The DEI editorial position comprises 0.086% of the 6974 total editorial positions, while social media (60/6974) and statistical (196/6974) editors comprise 0.86% and 2.81% of total journal editorial board positions, respectively.
Few of the most influential biomedical journals have implemented a formal, named position dedicated to DEI. Biomedical journals should consider establishing a dedicated DEI editorial position, and ensure this individual position is publicly denoted on the editorial board.
尽管多元化、公平和包容(DEI)倡议正在学术医学、生物医学研究和医疗保健的各个领域逐步实施,但整个医学和生物医学研究中仍存在重大不平等现象。纠正这些长期存在的不平等现象的一种方法是在期刊编辑委员会中设立一个专门负责DEI的职位;因此,我们试图评估这一职位在高影响力生物医学研究期刊中的实施程度。
我们对30个医学专业中影响因子(IF)排名前100的期刊的编辑委员会进行了横断面分析。所有编辑委员会职位(主编、副主编、编委和助理编辑,以及编辑和顾问委员会成员)均包括在内。我们还评估了其他指定职位编辑(即社交媒体和统计编辑)的比例,并将其与DEI编辑的比例进行比较。
在100种IF最高的生物医学期刊(范围:12.035 - 508.702)中,有6种(6%)设有DEI编辑职位。相比之下,分别有25种(25%)和35种(35%)期刊至少设有1个社交媒体或统计编辑职位。DEI编辑职位占6974个编辑职位总数的0.086%,而社交媒体编辑(60/6974)和统计编辑(196/6974)分别占期刊编辑委员会职位总数的0.86%和2.81%。
很少有最具影响力的生物医学期刊设立专门负责DEI的正式指定职位。生物医学期刊应考虑设立专门的DEI编辑职位,并确保该职位在编辑委员会中公开注明。