Gender Representation in American Urological Association Guidelines

To study patterns and factors associated with female representation in the American Urological Association (AUA) guidelines. We gathered publicly available information about the panelists, including the AUA section, practice setting, academic rank, fellowship training, years in practice, and H-index...

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Veröffentlicht in:Urology (Ridgewood, N.J.) N.J.), 2021-10, Vol.156, p.47-51
Hauptverfasser: Hougen, Helen Y., Goodstein, Francesca R., Bassale, Solange, Chen, Yiyi, Seideman, Casey A., Isharwal, Sudhir
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container_end_page 51
container_issue
container_start_page 47
container_title Urology (Ridgewood, N.J.)
container_volume 156
creator Hougen, Helen Y.
Goodstein, Francesca R.
Bassale, Solange
Chen, Yiyi
Seideman, Casey A.
Isharwal, Sudhir
description To study patterns and factors associated with female representation in the American Urological Association (AUA) guidelines. We gathered publicly available information about the panelists, including the AUA section, practice setting, academic rank, fellowship training, years in practice, and H-index. The factors associated with the proportion of female panelists and trends were investigated. We also examined the proportion of female panelists in the European Association of Urology (EAU) and National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) urology guidelines. There were 483 non-unique panelists in AUA guidelines, and 17% are female. Non-urologist female panelists in AUA guidelines represented a higher proportion than female urologists (30% vs 13%, P
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.urology.2021.02.027
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We gathered publicly available information about the panelists, including the AUA section, practice setting, academic rank, fellowship training, years in practice, and H-index. The factors associated with the proportion of female panelists and trends were investigated. We also examined the proportion of female panelists in the European Association of Urology (EAU) and National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) urology guidelines. There were 483 non-unique panelists in AUA guidelines, and 17% are female. Non-urologist female panelists in AUA guidelines represented a higher proportion than female urologists (30% vs 13%, P&lt;0.0001). Compared with male panelists, females had lower H-indices (median 23 vs 35, P&lt;0.001), and fewer were fellowship-trained (77.2% vs 86.8%; P=0.042). On multivariate analysis, non-urologists and panelists with lower H-indices were more likely to be female but there was no association between guideline specialties, academic ranking, geographic section, years in practice, and fellowship training with increased female authorship. Overtime, the proportion of female participation in guidelines remained stable. In the EAU and NCCN guideline panels, 12.2% and 10.7% were female, respectively. Female representation among major urologic guidelines members is low and unchanged overtime. Female urologist participation was proportional to their representation in the urology workforce. 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On multivariate analysis, non-urologists and panelists with lower H-indices were more likely to be female but there was no association between guideline specialties, academic ranking, geographic section, years in practice, and fellowship training with increased female authorship. Overtime, the proportion of female participation in guidelines remained stable. In the EAU and NCCN guideline panels, 12.2% and 10.7% were female, respectively. Female representation among major urologic guidelines members is low and unchanged overtime. Female urologist participation was proportional to their representation in the urology workforce. 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subjects Female
Humans
Male
Physicians, Women - statistics & numerical data
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Sex Distribution
Societies, Medical - statistics & numerical data
United States
Urologists - statistics & numerical data
Urology - statistics & numerical data
title Gender Representation in American Urological Association Guidelines
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