在 MEDLINE 或 PubMed Central 列出的护理期刊中遵守国际医学期刊编辑委员会建议的性别平等政策:一项描述性研究

Science Editing Pub Date : 2024-02-20 DOI:10.6087/kcse.328
Eun Jeong Ko, Geum-Hee Jeong
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:不断发展的护理研究强调包容性的代表性。国际医学期刊编辑委员会 (ICMJE) 制定了指导方针,以确保各种人口统计学变量(包括年龄、性别和种族)的公平代表性。本研究旨在评估被 MEDLINE 或 PubMed Central 编入索引的护理期刊对 ICMJE 有关性别公平指令的遵守情况,因为被 MEDLINE 和 PubMed Central 编入索引的期刊通常都遵守 ICMJE 的指导方针:采用描述性文献综述方法分析了截至 2023 年 7 月 28 日两个数据库中收录的 160 种护理期刊。我们搜索了每种期刊的网站,并从每种期刊中选取了最新的原创文章。然后评估这些文章是否符合 ICMJE 的性别平等指南。结果:在 160 种期刊中,115 篇文章涉及人类群体。在这些文章中,有 93 篇需要说明性别公平问题。在这一子集中,有 83 篇文章对人类受试者的性别进行了区分。有 15 篇文章提供了基于性别的解释,另有 68 篇文章没有提供性别差异的解释。在 10 篇未对性别进行划分的文章中,只有两篇文章说明了这种忽略的原因:结论:在 MEDLINE 和 PubMed Central 索引的护理期刊上发表的近期文章中,仅有 16.1% 的文章提供了明确的性别分析。这些发现凸显了编辑在编辑政策中加强性别平等的必要性。
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Adherence to the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors–recommended gender equity policy in nursing journals listed in MEDLINE or PubMed Central: a descriptive study
Purpose: The evolving landscape of nursing research emphasizes inclusive representation. The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) has established guidelines to ensure the fair representation of various demographic variables, including age, sex, and ethnicity. This study aimed to evaluate the adherence of nursing journals indexed in MEDLINE or PubMed Central to the ICMJE’s directives on gender equity, given that journals indexed in MEDLINE and PubMed Central typically adhere to the ICMJE’s guidelines.Methods: A descriptive literature review methodology was employed to analyze 160 nursing journals listed in two databases as of July 28, 2023. The website of each journal was searched, and the most recent original article from each was selected. These articles were then evaluated for their alignment with the ICMJE guidelines on gender equity. Descriptive statistics were applied to categorize and enumerate the cases.Results: Of the articles reviewed from 160 journals, 115 dealt with human populations. Of these, 93 required a description of gender equity. Within this subset, 83 articles distinguished between the genders of human subjects. Gender-based interpretations were provided in 15 articles, while another 68 did not offer an interpretation of differences by gender. Among the 10 articles that did not delineate gender, only two provided a rationale for this omission.Conclusion: Among recent articles published in the nursing journals indexed in MEDLINE and PubMed Central, only 16.1% presented clear gender analyses. These findings highlight the need for editors to strengthen their dedication to gender equity within their editorial policies.
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