Female and low‐ and middle‐income authorship trends in high‐impact ENT journals (2011–2020)

Author:

Jashek‐Ahmed Farizeh1ORCID,Daudu Davina2,Heer Baveena3,Ali Hawa4ORCID,Wiedermann Joshua4ORCID,Seguya Amina5,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Head and Neck Surgery The International Centre for Recurrent Head and Neck Cancer (IReC), The Royal Marsden Hospital London UK

2. Resident Medical Office Fiona Stanley Hospital Murdoch Western Australia

3. GKT School of Medical Education King's College London London UK

4. Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

5. Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, Mulago National Referral Hospital Kampala Uganda

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionDespite a recent drive to increase diversity, the global academic workforce is skewed in favor of authors from high‐income countries, and women are under‐represented in the published medical literature.ObjectivesTo explore the trends in authorship of three high‐impact otolaryngology journals over a ten‐year period (2011–2020).MethodsJournals selected: JAMA Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, The Laryngoscope and Rhinology. Articles were reviewed from four issues per journal per year, and data was collected on: time of publication; subspeciality; number of authors; sex of first and last authors; country of practice of first author and country where each study was conducted. Trends were examined though univariate and multivariate logistic regression models.Results2998 articles were included. 93.9% of first authors and 94.2% of studies were from high‐income countries.Women were first authors in 31.5% (n = 912) and senior authors in 18.4% (n = 524) of articles. Female first authorship significantly increased between 2011 and 2020 however female senior authorship remained the same. There have been no significant changes in the proportion of published articles from low‐and middle‐income countries (LMIC) over time (p = .65). Amongst the LMIC articles, 72% came from Brazil, Turkey or China and there were no published papers from countries with a low‐income economy (gross national income per capita of $1085 or less).ConclusionsAlthough female first authorship has increased in the last decade, there has been minimal other demographic change in authorship over this time. High‐impact otolaryngology journals poorly represent academia in low‐and‐middle income countries. There is a need for increased advocacy promoting gender and geographical research equity in academic medicine.Level of EvidenceIII.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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