Deaver Courtney, Bauer Isabel L, Pico Annemarie, Nosova Kristin, Challapalli Mahesh, Khan Naushaba, Cavagnaro Maria Jose, Barbagli Giovanni, Dholaria Nikhil, Kelbert James, Soto Rubio Diego T, Hussein Amna, Mayeku Julie, Alhalal Ibrahim A, Pacheco Niels, Al-Arfaj Abdullah, Li Chao, Prim Michael, Baaj Ali A
J Neurosurg Spine. 2025 May 30;43(2):246-251. doi: 10.3171/2025.2.SPINE24723. Print 2025 Aug 1.
The objective of this study was to examine the trends in female authorship in high-impact spine journals and identify barriers present for female authors in spine surgery.
A bibliometric analysis of seven spine surgery journals was conducted, covering publications from 2016 to 2021. First and senior author genders were determined using Genderize.io, supplemented by manual verification for ambiguous cases. Geographic and specialty-specific trends were analyzed, focusing on neurosurgery and orthopedic surgery.
Among 11,757 identified first authors and 11,231 identified senior authors, 13.4% of first authors and 9.3% of senior authors were female. Gender concordance analysis showed that with a female senior author, 26.7% of first authors were female compared with 12.5% with male senior authors (p < 0.00001). In 2021, there was no significant difference in the proportion of female senior authors between orthopedic (2.7%) and neurosurgery (1.2%) specialties. Papers with female authors were published in higher-impact factor journals, with the average impact factor for female first authors being 3.08 compared with the male average of 3.02, and for female senior authors, the average impact factor was 3.10 compared with their male counterparts' average of 3.02 (female first authors: p < 0.05, female senior authors: p < 0.001). US publications had fewer female first authors compared with international publications (p < 0.001).
This study underscores the need for targeted strategies to overcome barriers to female participation and advancement in spine surgery. Enhancing mentorship and addressing implicit biases are essential to attract and retain more women in this field, ultimately benefiting the specialty and patient care.
本研究的目的是调查高影响力脊柱期刊中女性作者的趋势,并确定脊柱外科女性作者面临的障碍。
对7种脊柱外科期刊进行文献计量分析,涵盖2016年至2021年的出版物。使用Genderize.io确定第一作者和资深作者的性别,并对不明确的情况进行人工核实。分析了地理和特定专业的趋势,重点是神经外科和骨科手术。
在11757名确定的第一作者和11231名确定的资深作者中,13.4%的第一作者和9.3%的资深作者为女性。性别一致性分析表明,有女性资深作者时,26.7%的第一作者为女性,而男性资深作者时这一比例为12.5%(p<0.00001)。2021年,骨科(2.7%)和神经外科(1.2%)专业的女性资深作者比例没有显著差异。有女性作者的论文发表在影响因子较高的期刊上,女性第一作者的平均影响因子为3.08,男性平均为3.02;女性资深作者的平均影响因子为3.10,男性同行平均为3.02(女性第一作者:p<0.05,女性资深作者:p<0.001)。与国际出版物相比,美国的出版物中女性第一作者较少(p<0.001)。
本研究强调需要采取有针对性的策略来克服女性参与脊柱外科手术及职业发展的障碍。加强指导和消除隐性偏见对于吸引和留住该领域更多女性至关重要,最终将使该专业和患者护理受益。