Systematic analysis of authorship demographics in global surgery
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Published:2021-10
Issue:10
Volume:6
Page:e006672
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ISSN:2059-7908
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Container-title:BMJ Global Health
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language:en
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Short-container-title:BMJ Glob Health
Author:
Ravi KrithiORCID, Bentounsi Zineb, Tariq Aiman, Brazeal Aurelia, Daudu Davina, Back Francesca, Elhadi Muhammed, Badwi Nermin, Shah Sayed Shah Nur Hussein, Bandyopadhyay SohamORCID, Khalil Halimah, Kimura Hitomi, Sekyi-Djan Mama Ntiriwa, Abdelrahman Ahmed, Shaheen Ahmed, Mbonda Noula Aime Gilbert, Wong Ai-Ting, Ndajiwo Aliyu, Souadka Amine, Maina Ann Nyandia, Nyalundja Arsene Daniel, Sabry Aya, Hind Bourja, Nteranya Daniel Safari, Ngugi Dorcas Wambui, de Wet Elsa, Tolis Engy Amgad, Wafqui F Z, Essangri Hajar, Moujtahid Hajar, Moola Husna, Narain Kapil, Ravi Krupa, Wassim KyrillosORCID, Odiero Lucianne A, Nyaboke Lucina Stephanie, Metwalli Maram, Naisiae Maryanne, Pueschel Miriam Gerd, Turabi Nafisa, El Aroussi Nouhaila, Makram Omar MohamedORCID, Shawky Omar A, Outani Oumaima, Carides Peter, Patil Poorvaprabha, Halley-Stott Richard P, Kurbegovic Sabina, Marchant Samantha, Moujtahid Sara, El Hadrati Soukaina, Agarwal Tanishq, Kidavasi Valerie Atonya, Agarwal Vrinda, Steyn Wilme, Matumo Winnie, Fahmy Youssef Ahmed, Omar Zaayid, Amod Zachary, Eloff Madelein, Hussein Nafisa Agil, Sharma Dhananjaya
Abstract
BackgroundGlobal surgery has recently gained prominence as an academic discipline within global health. Authorship inequity has been a consistent feature of global health publications, with over-representation of authors from high-income countries (HICs), and disenfranchisement of researchers from low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). In this study, we investigated authorship demographics within recently published global surgery literature.MethodsWe performed a systematic analysis of author characteristics, including gender, seniority and institutional affiliation, for global surgery studies published between 2016 and 2020 and indexed in the PubMed database. We compared the distribution of author gender and seniority across studies related to different topics; between authors affiliated with HICs and LMICs; and across studies with different authorship networks.Results1240 articles were included for analysis. Most authors were male (60%), affiliated only with HICs (51%) and of high seniority (55% were fully qualified specialist or generalist clinicians, Principal Investigators, or in senior leadership or management roles). The proportion of male authors increased with increasing seniority for last and middle authors. Studies related to Obstetrics and Gynaecology had similar numbers of male and female authors, whereas there were more male authors in studies related to surgery (69% male) and Anaesthesia and Critical care (65% male). Compared with HIC authors, LMIC authors had a lower proportion of female authors at every seniority grade. This gender gap among LMIC middle authors was reduced in studies where all authors were affiliated only with LMICs.ConclusionAuthorship disparities are evident within global surgery academia. Remedial actions to address the lack of authorship opportunities for LMIC authors and female authors are required.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy
Cited by
37 articles.
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