| Literature DB >> 28008287 |
Bilkis Vissandjee1, Assia Mourid2, Christina A Greenaway3, Wendy E Short4, Jodi A Proctor5.
Abstract
Despite broadening consideration of sex- and gender-based issues in health research, when seeking information on how sex and gender contribute to disease contexts for specific health or public health topics, a lack of consistent or systematic use of terminology in health literature means that it remains difficult to identify research with a sex or gender focus. These inconsistencies are driven, in part, by the complexity and terminological inflexibility of the indexing systems for gender- and sex-related terms in public health databases. Compounding the issue are authors' diverse vocabularies, and in some cases lack of accuracy in defining and using fundamental sex-gender terms in writing, and when establishing keyword lists and search criteria. Considering the specific case of the tuberculosis (TB) prevention and management literature, an analysis of sex and gender sensitivity in three health databases was performed. While there is an expanding literature exploring the roles of both sex and gender in the trajectory and lived experience of TB, we demonstrate the potential to miss relevant research when attempting to retrieve literature using only the search criteria currently available. We, therefore, argue that for good clinical practice to be achieved; there is a need for both public health researchers and users to be better educated in appropriate usage of the terminology associated with sex and gender. In addition, public health database indexers ought to accept the task of developing and implementing adequate definitions of sex and gender terms so as to facilitate access to sex- and gender-related research. These twin advances will allow clinicians to more readily recognize and access knowledge pertaining to systems of redress that respond to gendered risks that compound existing health inequalities in disease management and control, particularly when dealing with already complex diseases. Given the methodological and linguistic challenges presented by the multidimensional and highly contextual nature of definitions of sex and gender, it will be important that this review task be undertaken using a multidisciplinary approach.Entities:
Keywords: databases; gender; indexing; keywords search; literature search; sex; terminological accuracy; tuberculosis
Year: 2016 PMID: 28008287 PMCID: PMC5170621 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S119757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Available MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL subject headings for gender-related terms
| Subject headings | MEDLINE | EMBASE | CINAHL |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | NA | Yes | NA |
| Gender relations | NA | NA | NA |
| Institutionalized gender | NA | NA | NA |
| Gender roles | NA | NA | NA |
| Gender identity | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Gender and sex | NA | Yes | NA |
| Gender bias | NA | Yes | Yes |
| Sex role | NA | Yes | Yes |
| Sexism | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Masculinity | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Femininity | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Gender-specific care | NA | NA | Yes |
Abbreviations: CINAHL, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature; EMBASE, Excerpta Medica Database; MEDLINE, Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online; NA, not available.
Terms mapped to the descriptors: gender identity/ and sexism/ in MeSH
| Gender identity/entry terms | Sexism/entry terms | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender identities | Roles, men’s | Sex bias |
| Identity, gender | Man’s role | Bias, sex |
| Sex role | Role, man’s | Gender bias |
| Role, sex | Woman’s role | Bias, gender |
| Roles, sex | Role, woman’s | Sex discrimination |
| Sex roles | Roles, woman’s | Discrimination, sex |
| Gender role | Woman’s roles | |
| Gender roles | Women’s role | |
| Roles, gender | Role, women’s | |
| Gender | Roles, women’s | |
| Men’s role | Women’s roles | |
| Role, men’s | ||
Note: Data from reference 38.
Abbreviation: MeSH, Medical Subject Headings.
MeSH, EMTREE, and CINAHL headings and free text (keywords) for basic tuberculosis and gender/sex searches
| MEDLINE | EMBASE | CINAHL | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tuberculosis | exp | exp Tuberculosis/ | (MH |
| Gender | Gender identity/ | Gender/ | (MH “Gender Identity”) |
| Masculinity/ | Masculinity/ | (MH “Femininity”) | |
| Femininity/ | Femininity/ | (MH “Masculinity”) | |
| Gender | (MH “Gender Bias”) | ||
| Identity/ | (MH “Gender Specific Care”) | ||
| Gender bias/ | (MH “Sex Role”) | ||
| Sexism/ | Sex role/ | (MH “Sexism”) | |
| Sexism/ | (MH “Sex Factors”) | ||
| Sex | Sex factors/ | Sex difference/ | (MH sex) |
| Sex characteristics/ | Sex/ | ||
| Sex/ | |||
| Tuberculosis | Tuberculosis. ab,kw,ti | Tuberculosis. ab,kw,ti. | TI |
| OR MW | |||
| Gender | Gender* | Gender*. ab,kw,ti. | TI gender* OR AB gender* OR |
| MW gender* | |||
| (Gender OR masculin* OR feminin* OR “sex role*” OR sexism). ab,kw,ti. | (Gender OR masculin* OR feminin* OR “sex role*” OR sexism). ab,kw,ti. | TI (masculin* or feminin* or “sex role*” or sexism) OR AB (masculin* or feminin* or “sex role*” or sexism) OR MW (masculin* or feminin* or “sex role*” or sexism) | |
| Sex | Sex. ab,kw,ti | Sex. ab,kw,ti | TI sex OR AB sex OR MW sex |
| Sex specificity | (Sex adj4 | (Sex adj4 (characteristics OR differen* OR factor*)). ti,ab,kw. | TI ((sex N4 |
Notes:
Explode a subject heading in MEDLINE and EMBASE (retrieves results using the selected descriptor and all of its more specific descriptors).
Explode a subject heading in CINAHL.
Runs a search through these fields: abstract (ab), keywords (kw), and title (ti) in MEDLINE and EMBASE.
Runs a search through these fields: title (TI), abstract (AB), keywords (MW) in CINAHL.
Truncation: searches for variations of words that are formed with different suffixes.
Retrieve records that contain two searched words (in any order) and with a maximum of n words between them in MEDLINE and EMBASE.
Retrieve records that contain two searched words (in any order) and with a maximum of n words between them in CINAHL.
Abbreviations: CINAHL, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature; EMBASE, Excerpta Medica Database; EMTREE, controlled vocabulary of EMBASE; MEDLINE, Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online; MeSH, Medical Subject Headings; MH, label for the subject heading field in CINAHL; MW, runs a search through the keyword and subject heading fields in CINAHL.
Figure 1Observed ambiguities in search results for tuberculosis and sex-related papers.
Abbreviations: CINAHL, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature; EMBASE, Excerpta Medica Database; EMTREE, controlled vocabulary of EMBASE; MEDLINE, Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online; MeSH, Medical Subject Headings.
Figure 2Observed ambiguities in search results for tuberculosis and gender-related papers.
Abbreviations: CINAHL, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature; EMBASE, Excerpta Medica Database; EMTREE, controlled vocabulary of EMBASE; MEDLINE, Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online.
Questions to guide improved integration of sex- and gender-related concepts in health research
| Study element | Relevant questions |
|---|---|
| Approaching the research issue | Are the concepts of gender and/or sex used in the proposed research project? |
| Drafting research questions and hypotheses | Does the research question(s) or hypothesis/es make reference to gender and/or sex, or relevant groups or phenomena? (eg, differences between males and females, differences among women, seeking to understand a gendered phenomenon, such as masculinity) |
| Reviewing the literature | Does the literature review cite prior studies that support the existence of significant differences between women and men, boys and girls, or males and females? |
| Applying the methods | Is the sample appropriate to capture gender- and/or sex-based factors? Is it possible to collect data that are disaggregated by sex and/or gender? Are the inclusion and exclusion criteria well justified with respect to sex and/or gender? |
| Ethics | Does the study design account for the relevant ethical issues that might have particular significance with respect to gender and/or sex? (eg, inclusion of pregnant women in clinical trials) |
Notes: Canadian Institutes of Health Research; Excerpt from Integrating Gender and Sex in Health Research: A Tool for CIHR Peer Reviewers. Available from: http://www.cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/43216.html; 2014. All rights reserved. Reproduced with the permission of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, 2016.48