AI Article Synopsis

  • Neuro-oncology has expanded significantly since 2010, but diversity among clinical trial participants and professionals has seen only modest gains, prompting a survey to identify ways to improve inclusivity in the field.
  • In summer 2020, a survey by the Society for Neuro-Oncology collected data from 386 members across various regions, focusing on personal and professional characteristics and experiences with bias and mentorship.
  • The results revealed high levels of unconscious biases faced by non-White respondents, a lack of mentorship opportunities, and highlighted the need for targeted diversity initiatives to enhance representation in neuro-oncology.

Article Abstract

Background: Neuro-oncology has grown tremendously since 2010, marked by increasing society membership, specialized clinical expertise, and new journals. Yet, modest improvement in racial/ethnic diversity amongst clinical trial participants, researchers, and clinicians led us to conduct a survey to identify opportunities to enhance diversity and inclusiveness amongst neuro-oncology professionals.

Methods: In summer 2020, the Women and Diversity Committee of the Society for Neuro-Oncology (SNO) distributed an anonymous online survey to members and affiliates including the European Association of Neuro-Oncology (EANO), Asian Society for Neuro-Oncology (ASNO), Society for Neuro-Oncology Latin America (SNOLA) and Society for Neuro-Oncology Sub-Saharan Africa (SNOSSA). The survey captured personal and professional characteristics, biases, effective mentorship qualities, career service metrics, and suggested field/society changes. Results were analyzed by geography, profession, age, racial/ethnic, and sexual identity. Standard descriptive statistics characterized the study population.

Results: The 386 respondents were predominantly female (58%) with a median age range of 40-49 years (31%), White (65%), and SNO members (97%). Most worked in North America (77%) in a research profession (67%). A majority of White respondents reported never experiencing biases (64%), while the majority of non-White respondents reported unconscious biases/microaggressions, followed by a lack of/limited mentorship. Qualitative assessments showcased that personal/professional success metrics were linked to needed improvements in diversity and inclusion efforts within the neuro-oncology field.

Conclusions: The prevalence of racial/ethnic biases and poor mentorship rates amongst underrepresented groups in neuro-oncology is high and potentially linked to the limited diverse representation amongst members and affiliates. These findings warrant a swift implementation of equity and inclusion practices within the neuro-oncology field.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8563326PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noab172DOI Listing

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