| Literature DB >> 34112322 |
Harriette G C Van Spall1, Anuradha Lala2, Thomas F Deering3, Barbara Casadei4, Faiez Zannad5, Padma Kaul6, Roxana Mehran7, Gail D Pearson8, Monica R Shah9, Martha Gulati10, Cindy Grines11, Annabelle Santos Volgman12, James H Revkin13, Ileana Piña14, Carolyn S P Lam15, Judith S Hochman16, Tabassome Simon17, Mary N Walsh18, Biykem Bozkurt19.
Abstract
Women are under-represented as leaders of cardiovascular randomized controlled trials, representing 1 in 10 lead authors of cardiovascular trials published in high-impact journals. Although the proportion of cardiovascular specialists who are women has increased in recent years, the proportion of cardiovascular clinical trialists who are women has not. This gap, underpinned by systemic sexism, has not been adequately addressed. The benefits of diverse randomized controlled trial leadership extend to patients and professionals. In this position statement, we present strategies adopted by some organizations to end gender inequality in research leadership. We offer an actionable roadmap for early-career researchers, scientists, academic institutions, professional societies, trial sponsors, and journals to follow, with the goal of harnessing the strength of women and under-represented groups as research leaders and facilitating a just culture in the cardiovascular clinical trial enterprise.Entities:
Keywords: clinical trial; disparities; equity; gender; leadership; principal investigator; steering committee
Year: 2021 PMID: 34112322 DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2021.04.038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Coll Cardiol ISSN: 0735-1097 Impact factor: 24.094