Gender gap in medical research: a bibliometric study in Swiss university hospitals
Autor: | Nathalie Vernaz, Paul Sebo, Sylvain de Lucia |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Family medicine
Web of science Citations 030204 cardiovascular system & hematology Library and Information Sciences H-Index 03 medical and health sciences Medical research 0302 clinical medicine Female physician Medicine Gender gap 030212 general & internal medicine Male gender ddc:613 Bibliometric study business.industry General internal medicine Publications General Social Sciences Odds ratio University hospital Computer Science Applications business Switzerland Demography |
Zdroj: | Scientometrics (2020) |
ISSN: | 1588-2861 0138-9130 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11192-020-03741-w |
Popis: | Several studies explored gender inequalities in research, but only limited data are available concerning general internal medicine and family medicine. We aimed to assess the level of gender inequalities in Swiss academic medical research. In this bibliometric study conducted in March 2020, we selected all senior hospital physicians practicing internal medicine or family medicine in the six Swiss university hospitals. The list of these physicians was extracted from the hospitals’ websites. We recorded their socio-demographic characteristics. Then, using Web of Science, we retrieved the number of publications (overall, as first author, per year, per year as first author), the proportion of publications as first author, the number of citations (overall, per year, per publication) and the h-index, and we compared the data by gender. 367 senior physicians were included in the study [female physicians: 172 (47%), internal medicine: 187 (51%)]. Female physicians were four times less likely to be a professor (5% vs. 20%, p value p value p value 0.003). Finally, all bibliometric indices were associated with male gender (incident rate ratios ranging from 1.9 [(95% CI 1.3–2.8), p value 0.001] for number of citations per publication to 9.3 [(95% CI 5.3–16.2), p value p value 0.003). Our data suggest a “leaky pipeline” phenomenon (a lower proportion of women moving up the academic ladder). In addition, with the exception of the proportion of publications as first author, all bibliometric indices were lower for female than male physicians. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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