• Am. J. Surg. · Jul 2020

    Representation of women in speaking roles at surgical conferences.

    • Katherine M Gerull, Brandon Malik Wahba, Laurel M Goldin, Jared McAllister, Andrew Wright, Amalia Cochran, and Arghavan Salles.
    • Washington University in St. Louis, Department of Surgery, St. Louis, MO, United States.
    • Am. J. Surg. 2020 Jul 1; 220 (1): 20-26.

    BackgroundThere are a number of factors that may hinder women's surgical careers. Here, we focus on one possible factor: the representation of women at surgical conferences.MethodsUsing a purposive sample of 16 national surgical societies, we assessed the proportion of women speakers at each society's annual meeting in plenary speaker and session speaker (panelist and moderator) roles in 2011 and 2016.ResultsOverall, 23.8% (28,591/120,351) of all society members were women. Of the 129 plenary speakers, 19.4% (n = 25) were women. Twelve conferences (42.9%) had zero women as plenary speakers. Of the 5,161 session speakers, 1,120 (21.7%) were women. Three-hundred fifty-three (39.5%) of the 893 panels included only male speakers. The proportion of women on conference organizing committees was positively correlated with having women session speakers (r = 0.71, p=<0.001) CONCLUSIONS: There is underrepresentation of women as conference speakers, particularly in plenary roles. There was wide variability in the representation of women across conferences.Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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