Female authorship of covid-19 research in manuscripts submitted to 11 biomedical journals: cross sectional study

BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL(2021)

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摘要
OBJECTIVE To describe prominent authorship positions held by women and the overall percentage of women coauthoring manuscripts submitted during the covid-19 pandemic compared with the previous two years. DESIGN Cross sectional study. SETTING Nine specialist and two large general medical journals. POPULATION Authors of research manuscripts submitted between 1 January 2018 and 31 May 2021. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Primary outcome: first author's gender. Secondary outcomes: last and corresponding authors' gender; number (percentage) of women on authorship byline in "pre-pandemic" period (1 January 2018 to 31 December 2019) and in "covid-19" and "noncovid-19" manuscripts during pandemic. RESULTS A total of 63 259 manuscripts were included. The number of female first, last, and corresponding authors respectively were 1313 (37.1%), 996 (27.9%), and 1119 (31.1%) for covid-19 manuscripts (lowest values in Jan-May 2020: 230 (29.4%), 165 (21.1%), and 185 (22.9%)), compared with 8583 (44.9%), 6118 (31.2%), and 7273 (37.3%) for pandemic non-covid-19 manuscripts and 12 724 (46.0%), 8923 (31.4%), and 10 981 (38.9%) for pre-pandemic manuscripts. The adjusted odds ratio of having a female first author in covid-19 manuscripts was <1.00 in all groups (P<0.001) compared with pre-pandemic (lowest in Jan-May 2020: 0.55, 98.75% confidence interval 0.43 to 0.70). The adjusted odds ratio of
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