Author:
Ochuko-Emore Mercy E.,Beezhold Julian,Morakinyo Jide
Abstract
Aims and methodTo determine female authorship of original articles and editorials
between January 1997 and December 2008 in the British Journal of
Psychiatry and the Psychiatric Bulletin.
Editorials from Advances in Psychiatric Treatment and
the geographical region of the female first author of original articles
were also included in the study.ResultsThe gender was determined for 99.2% of the 2324 first authors of original
articles and 100% of the 614 editorials. The percentage of original
articles by female first authors fluctuated over the study period,
ranging from 22.5 to 42.1% (mean 33.6) in the British Journal of
Psychiatry, and from 25.5 to 46.8% (mean 37.6) in the
Psychiatric Bulletin. There was a gross
underrepresentation of females as first authors of editorials in all
three journals. The percentage of female first authors of original
articles from low- and middle-income countries ranged from 0.3 to 3.4% in
both the British Journal of Psychiatry and the
Psychiatric Bulletin.Clinical implicationsThere is an increasing trend in female first authorship of original
articles. However, females remain underrepresented, especially in
editorials, in the British psychiatric journals examined. The
representation of female first authors from low- and middle-income
countries is disproportionately low. Strategies to address these
inequalities should be implemented.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
1 articles.
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