Tao Brendan K, Xie Jim S, Leong Rachel, Xia Matton, Nguyen Anne Xuan-Lan, Ling Jennifer, Nathoo Nawaaz, Ing Edsel B, Kohly Radha P, Khosa Faisal
Faculty of Medicine, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada.
Eur J Ophthalmol. 2025 Jan;35(1):126-132. doi: 10.1177/11206721241259806. Epub 2024 Jun 5.
This cross-sectional study evaluated the prevalence of inclusive author submission guidelines across ophthalmology journals.
Journals were identified from the 2021 Journal Citations Report (Clarivate Analytics). Independent reviewers rated each author submission guideline as "inclusive" for satisfying at-least one of six criteria: i) included examples of gender inclusive language; ii) recommended the use of gender-inclusive language; iii) distinguished between sex and gender; iv) provided educational resources on gender-inclusive language; v) provided a policy permitting name changes (e.g., in case of gender and name transition); and/or vi) provided a statement of commitment to inclusivity. The primary objective was to investigate the proportion of journals with "gender-inclusive" author submission guidelines and the elements of the gender-inclusive content within these guidelines. A secondary objective was to review the association between "gender-inclusivity" in author submission guidelines with publisher, origin country, and journal/source/influence metrics (Clarivate Analytics).
Across 94 journals, 29.8% journals were rated as inclusive. Inclusive journals had significantly higher relative impact factor, citations, and article influence scores compared to non-inclusive journals. Of the 29.8% of inclusive journals, the three most common domains were inclusion of an inclusivity statement (71.4% of inclusive journals), distinguishing between sex and gender (67.9%), and provision of additional educational resources on gender reporting for authors (60.7%).
A minority of ophthalmology journals have gender-inclusive author submission guidelines. Ophthalmology journals should update their submission guidelines to advance gender equity of both authors and study participants and promote the inclusion of gender-diverse communities.
本横断面研究评估了眼科期刊中包容性作者投稿指南的流行情况。
从2021年期刊引证报告(科睿唯安分析公司)中识别期刊。独立评审员将每条作者投稿指南评为“包容性”,条件是满足以下六个标准中的至少一条:i)包含性别包容性语言的示例;ii)建议使用性别包容性语言;iii)区分性别和社会性别;iv)提供关于性别包容性语言的教育资源;v)提供允许更改姓名的政策(例如,在性别和姓名转变的情况下);和/或vi)提供对包容性的承诺声明。主要目的是调查具有“性别包容性”作者投稿指南的期刊比例以及这些指南中性别包容性内容的要素。次要目的是审查作者投稿指南中的“性别包容性”与出版商、原产国以及期刊/来源/影响力指标(科睿唯安分析公司)之间的关联。
在94种期刊中,29.8%的期刊被评为具有包容性。与非包容性期刊相比,包容性期刊的相对影响因子、被引频次和文章影响力得分显著更高。在29.8%的包容性期刊中,三个最常见的领域是包含包容性声明(71.4%的包容性期刊)、区分性别和社会性别(67.9%)以及为作者提供关于性别报告的额外教育资源(60.7%)。
少数眼科期刊具有性别包容性作者投稿指南。眼科期刊应更新其投稿指南,以推进作者和研究参与者的性别平等,并促进对性别多样化群体的包容。