Department of Neurology, University of Minnesota Twin Cities, St. Louis Park, Minnesota, USA.
Department of Neurology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2024 Nov;33(11):1464-1475. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2023.0983. Epub 2024 Jul 10.
Intersection of gender and race and/or ethnicity in academic medicine is understudied; we aim to understand these factors in relation to scholarly achievements for neurology faculty. Faculty from 19 US neurology departments completed a survey (2021-2022) to report rank, leadership positions, publications, funded projects, awards, and speaker invitations. Regression analyses examined effects of gender, race, and their intersectionality on these achievements. Women, Black/Indigenous/People of Color (BIPOC), and BIPOC women were comparator groups. Four hundred sixty-two faculty responded: 55% women, 43% men; 31% BIPOC, 63% White; 21% BIPOC women, 12% BIPOC men, 36% White women, 31% White men. Men and White faculty are more likely to be full professors than women and BIPOC faculty. The number of leadership positions, funded projects, awards, and speaker invitations are significantly greater in White compared to BIPOC faculty. Relative to BIPOC women, the number of leadership positions is significantly higher among BIPOC men, White women, and White men. Publication numbers for BIPOC men are lower, number of funded projects and speaker invitations for White women are higher, and number of awards among White men and White women is higher compared to BIPOC women. Our study highlights that inequities in academic rank, award number, funded projects, speakership invitations, and leadership roles disproportionately impacted BIPOC women. More studies are needed to evaluate gender and race and/or ethnicity intersectionality effects on faculty achievements, reasons for inequities, recognition, and potential solutions.
医学学术领域中性别、种族和/或民族的交叉问题研究不足;我们旨在了解这些因素与神经科教师的学术成就的关系。19 名美国神经科系的教师完成了一项调查(2021-2022 年),报告他们的职称、领导职位、出版物、资助项目、奖项和演讲邀请。回归分析考察了性别、种族及其交叉因素对这些成就的影响。女性、黑人/原住民/有色人种(BIPOC)和 BIPOC 女性是对照组。462 名教师做出了回应:55%是女性,43%是男性;31%是 BIPOC,63%是白人;21%是 BIPOC 女性,12%是 BIPOC 男性,36%是白人女性,31%是白人男性。男性和白人教师更有可能成为正教授,而女性和 BIPOC 教师则不然。与 BIPOC 教师相比,白人教师担任领导职务、获得资助项目、获得奖项和演讲邀请的人数明显更多。与 BIPOC 女性相比,BIPOC 男性、白人女性和白人男性担任领导职务的人数明显更高。BIPOC 男性的出版物数量较低,白人女性的资助项目和演讲邀请数量较高,而白人男性和白人女性的奖项数量较高,与 BIPOC 女性相比。我们的研究表明,学术职称、奖项数量、资助项目、演讲邀请和领导角色方面的不平等,对 BIPOC 女性的影响不成比例。需要更多的研究来评估性别、种族和/或民族交叉因素对教师成就、不平等的原因、认可和潜在解决方案的影响。