Klug Peter, Adams Jacob, Lents Gordon, Long Rachel, Herda Ashley, Vopat Bryan, Vopat Lisa
Kansas University Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, USA.
Department of Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of Kansas Health System, Kansas City, KS, USA.
Foot Ankle Orthop. 2024 Apr 5;9(2):24730114241241318. doi: 10.1177/24730114241241318. eCollection 2024 Apr.
Female representation within athletics has increased as a result of Title IX, rising popularity, demand for equal compensation, and greater participation in multiple sports. Despite this, gender disparities in sports medicine research are apparent. This project serves to review the literature available on fifth-metatarsal fractures and assess the representation of female athletes in current literature.
We used a standardized protocol to audit the representation of female athletes in sports science and sports medicine research for fifth-metatarsal fractures. Primary factors included population, athletic caliber, menstrual status, research theme, sample of males and females, journal impact factor, and Altmetric score.
Thirty articles met the inclusion criteria. A total of 472 fifth-metatarsal fractures were identified, with 373 of 472 fractures (79%) occurring in males and 99 of 472 (21%) in females. The majority of studies (18/30, 60%) were mixed cohort, followed by 10 male only (33.33%), 1 female only (3.33%), and 1 male vs female (3.33%). Out of 831 total patients in the 18 mixed-cohort studies, 605 of 831 patients (72.8%) were male and 226 of 831 patients (27%) were female. All 18 mixed-sex cohorts investigated health outcomes. Male-only studies evaluated health outcomes and performance metrics. No studies investigated female performance. The one female-only study investigated health outcomes and was the only study to account for menstrual status. There was a single metatarsal fracture in this study population.
Females are underrepresented in research regarding sports science and sports medicine research for fifth-metatarsal fractures. Research focused on female-only fifth-metatarsal fracture studies exploring the potential impact of female sex-specific factors such as menstrual status in study design are needed.
由于《第九章》、知名度上升、平等薪酬需求以及对多项运动的更多参与,女性在体育界的代表性有所增加。尽管如此,运动医学研究中的性别差异依然明显。本项目旨在回顾有关第五跖骨骨折的现有文献,并评估当前文献中女性运动员的代表性。
我们使用标准化方案审核体育科学和运动医学研究中女性运动员在第五跖骨骨折方面的代表性。主要因素包括人群、运动水平、月经状况、研究主题、男性和女性样本、期刊影响因子以及Altmetric评分。
30篇文章符合纳入标准。共识别出472例第五跖骨骨折,其中472例骨折中的373例(79%)发生在男性身上,472例中的99例(21%)发生在女性身上。大多数研究(18/30,60%)为混合队列研究,其次是仅男性研究10项(33.33%)、仅女性研究1项(3.33%)以及男性与女性对比研究1项(3.33%)。在18项混合队列研究的831名患者中,831名患者中的605名(72.8%)为男性,831名患者中的226名(27%)为女性。所有18个混合性别队列研究了健康结局。仅男性研究评估了健康结局和性能指标。没有研究调查女性表现。唯一一项仅女性研究调查了健康结局,并且是唯一一项考虑月经状况的研究。该研究人群中有一例跖骨骨折。
在第五跖骨骨折的体育科学和运动医学研究中,女性的代表性不足。需要开展专注于仅女性第五跖骨骨折研究,探索月经状况等女性特定因素在研究设计中的潜在影响。