论文标题

元研究:COVID-19医学论文的女性第一作者比预期的少。

Meta-Research: COVID-19 medical papers have fewer women first authors than expected

论文作者

Andersen, Jens Peter, Nielsen, Mathias Wullum, Simone, Nicole L., Lewiss, Resa E., Jagsi, Reshma

论文摘要

COVID-19的大流行导致了学校的关闭和疏远要求,这些要求破坏了许多人的工作和家庭生活。人们的担忧是,这些大流行造成的破坏可能不会平等影响男女研究人员。许多医学期刊都发表了有关大流行的论文,这些论文是由面临这些中断挑战的研究人员产生的。在这里,我们报告了一项分析结果,该结果比较了与大流行有关的1,893份医学论文中作者的性别分布与2019年同一期刊上发表的论文的性别分布,该论文与美国的第一作者和最后一位作者。使用混合效应回归模型,我们估计,与女性第一作者的Covid-19论文比例比2019年在同一期刊上发表的论文低19%,而我们对上一位作者的比较和每篇论文的整体女性作者的比较尚无定论。仔细检查表明,对于2020年3月和2020年4月发表的论文,作为Covid-19研究的第一作者的女性代表性特别低。我们的发现与妇女的研究生产力,尤其是早期职业妇女的研究生产力一致,尤其是早期职业妇女的影响比男性的研究生产力更大。

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in school closures and distancing requirements that have disrupted both work and family life for many. Concerns exist that these disruptions caused by the pandemic may not have influenced men and women researchers equally. Many medical journals have published papers on the pandemic, which were generated by researchers facing the challenges of these disruptions. Here we report the results of an analysis that compared the gender distribution of authors on 1,893 medical papers related to the pandemic with that on papers published in the same journals in 2019, for papers with first authors and last authors from the United States. Using mixed-effects regression models, we estimated that the proportion of COVID-19 papers with a woman first author was 19% lower than that for papers published in the same journals in 2019, while our comparisons for last authors and overall proportion of women authors per paper were inconclusive. A closer examination suggested that women's representation as first authors of COVID-19 research was particularly low for papers published in March and April 2020. Our findings are consistent with the idea that the research productivity of women, especially early-career women, has been affected more than the research productivity of men.

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