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  4. Glass Ceiling in Hand Surgery: Publication Trends by Gender
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Glass Ceiling in Hand Surgery: Publication Trends by Gender

Publication type
journal article
Publication date
2022
Author(s)
Bram, Joshua T.
Magee, Lacey C.
Parambath, Andrew
Bauer, Andrea S.
Lawler, Ericka A.
more
Language
English
Keywords

Female

Humans

Male

Sex Factors

United States

Authorship

Research Personnel

Reconstructive Surgic...

Hand

Children

Gender

Surgery

Publication Trends

Discipline(s)

Surgery

Geographical area

USA

Abstract
Background: Women are frequently underrepresented across surgical subspecialties and may face barriers to academic advancement. Abstracts presented at American Society for Surgery of the Hand annual meeting (ASSH-AM) highlight some of the top research in hand surgery. We sought to explore differences in abstract characteristics and publication rates based on senior author gender.Though there have been increasing efforts at inclusivity in orthopedic and plastic surgery, women face several barriers to entering the field, publish less frequently, and are underrepresented in leadership positions. Understanding the stages at which discrepancies in research productivity exist may help to address these challenges. Methods: Abstracts from the 2010-2017 ASSH-AMs were reviewed to determine basic characteristics. Author gender was determined through both a search of institutional websites for gender-specific pronouns and inference of gender based on first name. Subsequent full manuscript publications corresponding to the abstracts were identified through a systematic search of PubMed and Google Scholar. Results: A total of 560/620 (90.3%) abstracts from 2010-2017 had an identifiable senior author gender (14.5% female). No differences were noted between male- and female-authored abstracts regarding study design including sample size or level of evidence. Female senior authors were more likely than males to author abstracts focused on pediatrics (19.8% vs 9.4%, p=0.01) and were more likely to collaborate with female first authors (41.3% vs 20.0%, p<0.01). Abstract publication rates were lower for female senior authors versus male senior authors (61.7% vs 74.5%, p=0.02). Conclusion: The number of abstracts with female senior authors had similar representation to the membership proportion of women in the ASSH. There were few differences in abstract characteristics based on senior author gender, though senior authors tend to collaborate with investigators of the same gender. Abstracts authored by females were published 13% less frequently overall, meriting further exploration. Level of Evidence: III.
Journal
The Iowa Orthopaedic Journal
ISSN
1555-1377
Volume
42
Issue
1
Pagination
3-9
URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9210407/
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