Gender distribution among surgical journals’ editorial boards: Empowering women surgeon scientists

Gender disparities still exist in the field of academic surgery. Women face additional obstacles obtaining high-ranking, surgical academia positions compared to men, and this may extend to the appointment of editorial board members. We aim to evaluate the gender distribution of editorial board membe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Surgery 2021-06, Vol.169 (6), p.1346-1351
Hauptverfasser: Ehrlich, Haley, Nguyen, Jackie, Sutherland, Mason, Ali, Aleeza, Gill, Sabrina, McKenney, Mark, Elkbuli, Adel
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container_end_page 1351
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1346
container_title Surgery
container_volume 169
creator Ehrlich, Haley
Nguyen, Jackie
Sutherland, Mason
Ali, Aleeza
Gill, Sabrina
McKenney, Mark
Elkbuli, Adel
description Gender disparities still exist in the field of academic surgery. Women face additional obstacles obtaining high-ranking, surgical academia positions compared to men, and this may extend to the appointment of editorial board members. We aim to evaluate the gender distribution of editorial board members, associate editors, and editors-in-chief of top US surgical journals and to recommend interventions, which can promote equitable gender representation among editorial boards. The study is a cross-sectional analysis using publicly available data regarding the number and proportion of female editorial board members, associate editors, and editors-in-chief from 42 US surgical journals. Descriptive statistics and linear regression were performed with significance defined as P < .05. Of 2,836 editorial board members from 42 US surgical journals, 420 (14.8%) were women. Of 881 associate editors, 118 (13.3%) were women. Only 2/42 (4.8%) of editors-in-chief were women. The mean proportions of female editorial board members and associate editors were 14.5% and 19.5%, respectively. No significant associations were found between the 2019 Scimago Journal & Country Rank indicator nor the 2019 impact factor and the proportion of female editorial board members and female associate editors after adjusting for author H-index. Gender disparities are evident in academic surgery, and women comprise a minority of US surgical editorial board members, associate editors, and editors-in-chief. The implementation of women mentorship from senior faculty on behalf of senior residents and junior faculty, as well as journal-facilitated pipeline programs, can diversify editorial board members by increasing women representation and reduce disparities in surgical journal editorial boards.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.surg.2020.12.026
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