AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study highlights the need for clarity in distinguishing between gender and sex in arthroplasty research, especially with increasing focus on transgender, gender nonconforming, and intersex identities.
  • - A review of 100 primary clinical research articles from top orthopaedic journals showed that most utilized gender or sex terminology, but often interchangeably and without clear definitions, leading to a lack of nuanced understanding.
  • - The findings indicate a prevalent binary perspective on gender and sex in these articles, with only a small percentage using these terms for detailed statistical analysis, suggesting a need for more precise and inclusive approaches in future research.

Article Abstract

Background: There is increasing appreciation of the distinction between gender and sex as well as the importance of accurately reporting these constructs. Given recent attention regarding transgender and gender nonconforming (TGNC) and intersex identities, it is more necessary than ever to understand how to describe these identities in research. This study sought to investigate the use of gender- and sex-based terminology in arthroplasty research.

Methods: The 5 leading orthopaedic journals publishing arthroplasty research were reviewed to identify the first twenty primary clinical research articles on an arthroplasty topic published after January 1, 2022. Use of gender- or sex-based terminology, whether use was discriminate, and whether stratification or adjustment based on gender or sex was performed, were recorded.

Results: There were 98 of 100 articles that measured a construct of gender or sex. Of these, 15 articles used gender-based terminology, 45 used sex-based terminology, and 38 used a combination of gender- and sex-based terminology. Of the 38 articles using a combination of terminology, none did so discriminately. All articles presented gender and sex as binary variables, and 2 attempted to explicitly define how gender or sex were defined. Of the 98 articles, 31 used these variables for statistical adjustments, though only 6 reported stratified results.

Conclusions: Arthroplasty articles infrequently describe how gender or sex was measured, and frequently use this terminology interchangeably. Additionally, these articles rarely offer more than 2 options for capturing variation in sex and gender. Future research should be more precise in the treatment of these variables to improve the quality of results and ensure findings are patient-centered and inclusive.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.arth.2024.05.004DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

gender sex
28
sex-based terminology
16
gender- sex-based
12
gender
9
sex
8
terminology
8
terminology arthroplasty
8
articles
8
arthroplasty
5
systematic review
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!