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Ethnic and Sex Diversity in Academic Orthopaedic Surgery: A Cross-sectional Study

Authors :
Neeraj Vij
Ian Singleton
Roy Bisht
Francisco Lucio
Selina Poon
Mohan V. Belthur
Source :
Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Global researchreviews. 6(3)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Although the diversity in orthopaedic residency programs has been studied, the diversity within academic orthopaedics has not.The board of specialty societies, five leading journals and the National Institutes of Health RePORTER tool, and three accreditation organizations were explored.The board of directors comprised 220 (72%) Caucasians, 36 (12%) Asians, 4 (1%) Hispanic/Latinos, 29 (9%) African Americans, and 18 (6%) Other individuals; 250 (81%) were men, and 57 (19%) were women. The editorial boards comprised 288 (77%) Caucasians, 62 (16%) Asians, 14 (4%) Hispanic/Latinos, 8 (2%) African Americans, and 4 (1%) Other individuals; 341 (91%) were men, and 35 (9%) were women. The National Institutes of Health grant recipients comprised 117 (64%) Caucasians, 58 (32%) Asians, 4 (2%) Hispanic/Latinos, and 3 (2%) African Americans; 128 (70%) were men, and 54 (30%) were women. On average, Caucasians, Asians, Hispanic/Latinos, and African Americans received $776,543, $439,600, $420,182, and $494,049, respectively. On average, men and women received $759,426 and $419,518, respectively. The accreditation boards comprised 45 (82%) Caucasians, 6 (11%) Asians, and 4 (7%) African Americans; 45 (82%) were men, and 10 (18%) were women.Academic orthopaedic surgery does not resemble the United States. Residency, fellowship committees, and professional organization boards need to become aware of these disparities.

Details

ISSN :
24747661
Volume :
6
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Global researchreviews
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d7a6c1dc8fd3af639db86356f18ef76c