| Literature DB >> 34172923 |
Claudia Heggie1, Sarah L McKernon2, Laura Gartshore3.
Abstract
Introduction Across healthcare, there is an urgent call to action to address systematic gender bias impeding equity for women. Gender imbalance exists for speakers at medical conferences. This research presents the first descriptive analysis of gender balance of speakers at dental conferences.Objectives Describe the gender balance of invited speakers at UK conferences of the dental specialties and general dentistry in a two-year period. Consider the findings in relation to gender balance of dental and specialist registrants.Method Gender, presentation length and professional role were extracted from conference programmes. Acceptable gender balance was pre-specified as 40-60%. Gender data were extracted from the GDC registration report.Results Of 352 invited speakers, 39.8% (n = 140) were identified as female and 60.2% (n = 212) as male. Gender was acceptably balanced in 21.4% (n = 3) of conferences. Gender balance of specialist speakers varied, as does gender distribution within the specialties themselves. Only 38.5% (n = 5) of specialties had a specialist speaker gender balance representative of their speciality.Conclusion There is a call for further research to drive equity in the characteristics of invited speakers and to determine whether there is correlation with representation in the composition of conference organising committees, leadership, professional roles and the workforce. Conference organisers are encouraged to strive proactively and prospectively towards representative programmes.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34172923 PMCID: PMC8231739 DOI: 10.1038/s41415-021-3072-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br Dent J ISSN: 0007-0610 Impact factor: 2.727
Fig. 1Gender balance of consultant female surgeons is improving, reproduced with permission from Royal College of Surgeons of England (data from NHS Digital)
Fig. 2Gender balance of registered doctors in the UK, permission to share granted by The King's Fund; originals available at: https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/audio-video/women-and-medical-leadership-infographics
Fig. 3Gender imbalance in leadership may negatively impact organisational performance, permission to share granted by The King's Fund; originals available at: https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/audio-video/women-and-medical-leadership-infographics
Fig. 4The proportion of female consultants in surgical specialties remains low but is varied, reproduced with permission from Royal College of Surgeons of England (data from NHS Digital)
The gender of specialist dentists (of any speciality and for the relevant domain speciality) presenting at each conference domain compared with the gender balance of dentists registered as specialists in each speciality as per the GDC registrant report. Gender was acceptably balanced to pre-specified criteria of 40-60% female speakers. Gender balance of relevant domains' speciality speakers was within 10% variance of the gender balance of the speciality
| Conference domain | Male | Female | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Specialist dentists as speakers | Specialist dentists from relevant speciality as speakers | Specialist registrants | Specialist dentists as speakers | Specialist dentists from relevant speciality as speakers | Specialist registrants | |
| Dental and maxillofacial radiology | 50.0% (n = 2) | 0.0% (n=0) | 46.4% (n=13) | 50.0% (n = 2)** | 100.0% (n = 1) | 53.6% (n=15) |
| Dental public health | 40.0% (n = 2) | 25.0% (n = 1) | 42.9% (n = 42) | 60.0% (n = 3)** | 75.0% (n = 3) | 57.1% (n=56) |
| Endodontics* | 100.0% (n = 1) | 100.0% (n = 1) | 74.2% (n = 230) | 0.0% (n = 0) | 0.0% (n = 0) | 25.8% (n = 80) |
| Oral and maxillofacial pathology | 75.0% (n = 3) | 75.0% (n = 3) | 52.9% (n = 18) | 25.0% (n = 1) | 25.0% (n = 1) | 47.1% (n = 16) |
| Oral medicine* | 0.0% (n = 0) | 0.0% (n = 0) | 57.1% (n = 40) | 100.0% (n = 2) | 100.0% (n = 1) | 42.9% (n = 30) |
| Oral microbiology | 50.0% (n = 1) | 100.0% (n = 1) | 28.6% (n = 2) | 50.0% (n = 1)** | 0.0% (n = 0) | 71.4% (n = 5) |
| Oral surgery | 58.8% (n = 10) | 60.0% (n = 6) | 67.8% (n = 499) | 41.2% (n = 7)** | 40.0% (n = 4)† | 32.2% (n = 237) |
| Orthodontics* | 73.3% (n = 11) | 78.6% (n = 11) | 49.2% (n = 680) | 26.7% (n = 4) | 21.4% (n = 3) | 50.8% (n = 703) |
| Paediatric dentistry | 41.2% (n = 7) | 27.3% (n = 3) | 21.1% (n = 51) | 58.8% (n = 10)** | 72.7% (n = 8)† | 78.9% (n = 191) |
| Periodontics | 89.5% (n = 17) | 87.5% (n = 14) | 67.2% (n = 260) | 10.5% (n = 2) | 12.5% (n = 2) | 32.8% (n = 127) |
| Prosthodontics | 76.5% (n = 13) | 81.8% (n = 9) | 76.5% (n = 342) | 23.5% (n = 4) | 18.2% (n = 2)† | 23.5% (n = 105) |
| Restorative dentistry | 80.0% (n = 20) | 81.0% (n = 17) | 72.5% (n = 214) | 20.0% (n = 5) | 19.0% (n = 4)† | 27.5% (n = 81) |
| Special care dentistry | 23.1% (n = 6) | 18.2% (n = 4) | 27.3% (n = 80) | 76.9% (n = 20) | 81.8% (n = 18)† | 72.7% (n = 213) |
Key:
* = conferences domains with data for only one year as detailed in Table 2.
** = acceptably balanced.
† = gender balance of these domains' specialty speakers was within 10% variance of the gender balance of the specialty.
Availability of conference programme information by conference domain for 2018 and 2019
| Conference domain | 2018 speaker information | 2019 speaker information |
|---|---|---|
| General dentistry | ✓ | ✓ |
| Dental and maxillofacial radiology | ✓ | ✓ |
| Dental public health | ✓ | ✓ |
| Endodontics | X | ✓ |
| Oral and maxillofacial pathology | ✓ | ✓ |
| Oral medicine | X** | ✓ |
| Oral microbiology | ✓* (2016) | ✓* (2018) |
| Oral surgery | ✓ | ✓ |
| Orthodontics | ✓ | X |
| Paediatric dentistry | ✓ | ✓ |
| Periodontics | ✓ | ✓ |
| Prosthodontics | ✓ | ✓ |
| Restorative dentistry | ✓ | ✓ |
| Special care dentistry | ✓ | ✓ |
Key:
* = indicates that conference is held biennially; therefore, programmes for 2016 and 2018 analysed.
** = main scientific conference programme not available; therefore, excluded from analysis.
The percentage of male and female speakers at each conference domain for combined events in 2018-2019. Gender was acceptably balanced to pre-specified criteria of 40-60% female speakers
| Conference domain | Male | Female | Gender balance |
|---|---|---|---|
| General dentistry | 63.0% (n = 17) | 37.0% (n = 10) | Male |
| Dental and maxillofacial radiology | 66.7% (n = 8) | 33.3% (n = 4) | Male |
| Dental public health | 48.0% (n = 12) | 52.0% (n = 13) | Acceptably balanced |
| Endodontics* | 60.0% (n = 3) | 40.0% (n = 2) | Acceptably balanced |
| Oral and maxillofacial pathology | 66.7% (n = 8) | 33.3% (n = 4) | Male |
| Oral medicine* | 33.3% (n = 3) | 66.7% (n = 6) | Female |
| Oral microbiology | 39.4% (n = 13) | 60.6% (n = 20) | Female |
| Oral surgery | 72.1% (n = 31) | 27.9% (n = 12) | Male |
| Orthodontics* | 81.0% (n = 17) | 19.0% (n = 4) | Male |
| Paediatric dentistry | 42.9% (n = 15) | 57.1% (n = 20) | Acceptably balanced |
| Periodontics | 81.6% (n = 31) | 18.4% (n = 7) | Male |
| Prosthodontics | 73.9% (n = 17) | 26.1% (n = 6) | Male |
| Restorative dentistry | 77.8% (n = 21) | 22.2% (n = 6) | Male |
| Special care dentistry | 38.1% (n = 16) | 61.9% (n = 26) | Female |
Key:
* = marks conferences domains with a partial dataset as detailed in Table 2.
Gender balance of conference speakers and GDC-registered dentists
| Type | Female | Male | Gender balance |
|---|---|---|---|
| GDC-registered dentists (registrants at March 2020) | 50.4% (n = 21,003) | 49.6% (n = 20,667) | Acceptably balanced |
| Conference speakers registered as dentists with the GDC | 41.2% (n = 80) | 58.8% (n = 114) | Acceptably balanced |