1278 MANELS: A Retrospective, Multi-National, Longitudinal Study for Quantitative Analysis of Gender Distribution in Speakers at Major Pan-Specialty Surgical Conferences
O Burton, M Georgi, A Asif, M Fricker, S Patel, A K Raja, A Gargan, K Gargan, K Lee, R Kamboj, A Thamilmaran, K H C Leung, Z Abdi, S Haque, F Tse, C Moore, A Nathan- Surgery
Abstract
Aim
Although the proportion of female medical students worldwide is increasing, only an estimated 35% of UK surgical trainees are female, and only 14% of consultant surgeons – these statistics are similar globally. This study aims to quantify the gender distribution in invited speakers and panellists at international pan-specialty surgical conferences in recent years.
Method
Retrospective analysis of annual meetings organised by 5 international surgical organizations between January 2016 and December 2021 was conducted. Male and female faculty were academically stratified according to mean publications, citations, and H-index. A manel was defined as a session with ≥ 2 speakers, all of whom are men. Sex was determined by specific speaker title in conference program, online autobiography, or Gender Balance Assessment Tool (GBAT).
Results
Between 22 conferences, there were 1978 invited speakers, of which 25.6% (n = 506) were female. Of the included 74 panel sessions, 48.6% (n = 36) were manels. When considering the gender of invited lecture speakers, there was no significant difference in their mean H-indices (M = 33.4, F = 27.8, p = 0.063) or mean total publications (M = 205.6, F = 169.9). Male invited lecturers had a significantly higher number of citations (M = 7944.7, F = 4211.7, p = 0.025). There was a significant decrease in the proportion of manels between 2016 and 2021 (p = 0.01).
Conclusions
Despite the increasing representation of women in surgery, only one quarter of invited speakers were female and almost half of panels with two or more speakers were manels despite no difference in speaker H-index or publications. This study highlights the need for new strategies and concerted efforts to increase female representation at surgical conferences.