4.7 Article

Gender differences in gastroenterology and hepatology authorship and editorial boards

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GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPY
卷 94, 期 4, 页码 713-723

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MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gie.2021.05.019

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This study examined the gender distribution of first and senior authors as well as editorial board members in high impact factor journals in gastroenterology and hepatology. The findings revealed that there is still a male dominance in positions such as editor-in-chief, editorial board membership, and senior authorship. Positive correlations were found between male-dominated editorial boards and male first and senior authorship, while negative correlations were observed between male-dominated editorial boards and female first and senior authorship. Additionally, there were positive correlations between the publication of first and senior authors of the same gender.
Background and Aims: Women are numerically under-represented in the field of gastroenterology and hepatology. This study aims to characterize the gender distribution of first and senior authors and editorial board members across high impact factor journals in gastroenterology and hepatology. Methods: Publications from January 1, 2019 to December 31, 2019 were reviewed from 29 journals. Gender of editorial board leadership, editorial board members, first, and senior authors was identified using publicly available data. Spearman correlation coefficients were calculated to assess for a relationship among editorial board, first author, and senior author gender and impact factor. Results: Of 29 journals (median impact factor 5.55) with 357 journal issues and 8036 articles, there were 3 of 39 female chief editors (7.7%), 601 of 3455 female editorial board members (17.4%), 2547 of 8036 female first authors (31.7%), and 1390of 7335 female senior authors (19%). Nostatistically significant correlations existed between impact factor and chief editor gender with gender distribution of editorial boards, first authors, or senior authors. Positive correlations existed between male-dominated editorial boards and male first (+.52, P = .005) and senior authorship (+.56, P = .002), whereas negative correlations occurred between male-dominated editorial boards and female first (-.51, P = .006) and senior authorship (-.56, P = .002). Positive correlations also existed between publication of first and senior authors of the same gender (+.57, men [P = .001]; +.58, women [P = .001]). Conclusions: Although gender distribution of female first authorship approaches current distributions in the field of gastroenterology and hepatology, editor-in-chief positions, editorial board membership, and senior authorship continue to be primarily men. Future endeavors to improve proportionate gender representation include improved journal leadership selection transparency, targeted diversity statements, and enhanced mentorship.

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