| Literature DB >> 27432056 |
Pavel V Ovseiko1, Trisha Greenhalgh2, Paula Adam3, Jonathan Grant4, Saba Hinrichs-Krapels4, Kathryn E Graham5, Pamela A Valentine5, Omar Sued6, Omar F Boukhris7, Nada M Al Olaqi8, Idrees S Al Rahbi9, Anne-Maree Dowd10, Sara Bice11, Tamika L Heiden12,13, Michael D Fischer14,15, Sue Dopson15, Robyn Norton16,17, Alexandra Pollitt4, Steven Wooding18, Gert V Balling19, Ulla Jakobsen20, Ellen Kuhlmann21,22, Ineke Klinge23, Linda H Pololi24, Reshma Jagsi25, Helen Lawton Smith26, Henry Etzkowitz26,27, Mathias W Nielsen28, Carme Carrion3,29, Maite Solans-Domènech3, Esther Vizcaino3, Lin Naing30, Quentin H N Cheok31, Baerbel Eckelmann32, Moses C Simuyemba33, Temwa Msiska34, Giovanna Declich35, Laurel D Edmunds36, Vasiliki Kiparoglou37,38, Alison M J Buchan39, Catherine Williamson40,41,42, Graham M Lord41,42,43, Keith M Channon36,37,38, Rebecca Surender44,45, Alastair M Buchan36,37,38.
Abstract
Global investment in biomedical research has grown significantly over the last decades, reaching approximately a quarter of a trillion US dollars in 2010. However, not all of this investment is distributed evenly by gender. It follows, arguably, that scarce research resources may not be optimally invested (by either not supporting the best science or by failing to investigate topics that benefit women and men equitably). Women across the world tend to be significantly underrepresented in research both as researchers and research participants, receive less research funding, and appear less frequently than men as authors on research publications. There is also some evidence that women are relatively disadvantaged as the beneficiaries of research, in terms of its health, societal and economic impacts. Historical gender biases may have created a path dependency that means that the research system and the impacts of research are biased towards male researchers and male beneficiaries, making it inherently difficult (though not impossible) to eliminate gender bias. In this commentary, we - a group of scholars and practitioners from Africa, America, Asia and Europe - argue that gender-sensitive research impact assessment could become a force for good in moving science policy and practice towards gender equity. Research impact assessment is the multidisciplinary field of scientific inquiry that examines the research process to maximise scientific, societal and economic returns on investment in research. It encompasses many theoretical and methodological approaches that can be used to investigate gender bias and recommend actions for change to maximise research impact. We offer a set of recommendations to research funders, research institutions and research evaluators who conduct impact assessment on how to include and strengthen analysis of gender equity in research impact assessment and issue a global call for action.Entities:
Keywords: Athena SWAN; Call for action; Gender; Health research; Path dependency; Research impact assessment; Science policy
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27432056 PMCID: PMC4950803 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-016-0126-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Fig. 1The gender equity pathway to maximise research impact. Shown are the forces that influence the key stakeholders in promoting gender equity to maximise different possible types of research impact
Fig. 2The Four “As” of research impact assessment with regard to gender equity
Selection of methods in research impact assessment and how they may be used to investigate and address gender bias
| Methods | Applications |
|---|---|
| Logic modelling describes and graphically represents the chains of results associated with all stages of the research process; theories of change are formulated on the basis of these chains of results to explain how to achieve the desired results | To provide a framework to systematically investigate gender equity at all stages of the research process, and investigate how gender equity can help maximise desired research outputs and impacts |
| Scientometrics pertain to the statistical analysis of articles and citations in academic journals (bibliometrics) and other research-based outputs, e.g. patents, commercialisation | To measure gender-based differences in research outputs, their academic impacts, including gender-biased citation behaviour, and non-academic impacts |
| Altmetrics measure the online attention to academic articles on social media, mainstream news websites, blogs and social bookmarking websites | To measure gender-based differences in more immediate academic and non-academic impact of research |
| Surveys, curriculum vitae data, narrative case studies and text-mining algorithms collect quantitative and qualitative information that may not already have been captured as part of the research process | To investigate gender-based differences in perceptions of and approaches to the research process, outcomes and impacts |
| Information and management science approaches allow developing balanced scorecards and other performance management systems | To assess and monitor gender equity in research organisations |
| Economic modelling categorises and cost-benefit analysis assesses different types of benefits from research | To examine how gender equity can maximise economic returns on investment in research |
Recommendations to include and strengthen analysis of gender equity in research impact assessment
| Stakeholders | Recommendations |
|---|---|
| Research funders | • Conduct retrospective and prospective observational gender-based research impact assessment to inform implementation of gender equity policies |
| Research institutions | • Establish information systems for collecting and analysing gender-based information on the research process |
| Research evaluators | • Engage with the research impact assessment literature with a view to identifying and applying evidence-based tools and approaches to gender-sensitive research impact assessment |