Author
Khursheed, TayyebaOvseiko, Pavel V
Harifi, Ghita
Badsha, Humeira
Cheng, Yew Kuang
Hill, Catherine L
Haq, Syed Atiqul
Danda, Debashish
Gupta, Latika

Affiliation
Pakistan Institute of medical Sciences; University of Oxford; Mediclinic Parkview Hospital; Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS TrustPublication date
2022-10-25Subject
Rheumatology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
We found a significant gap in gender parity, with most presidents in the region being men (210 of 252, 83%). More than one-third (7 of 19, 36.8%) of the MNOs had all male presidents, although the proportion of women improved from 7 to 25% in/after 2000 (P = 0.0002). A statistically significant increase in female representation was observed in Australia (P = 0.0268, from 7 to 39%) and New Zealand (P = 0.0011, where the proportion of female presidents increased from 0 to 45%), but not in other countries.Citation
Khursheed T, Ovseiko PV, Harifi G, Badsha H, Cheng YK, Hill CL, Haq SA, Danda D, Gupta L. Gender equity in rheumatology leadership in the Asia-Pacific. Rheumatol Adv Pract. 2022 Oct 25;6(3):rkac087. doi: 10.1093/rap/rkac087. PMID: 36382268; PMCID: PMC9642329.Type
ArticlePMID
36382268Publisher
Oxford University Pressae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1093/rap/rkac087