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World J Gastroenterol. Jul 21, 2012; 18(27): 3590-3594
Published online Jul 21, 2012. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v18.i27.3590
Published online Jul 21, 2012. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v18.i27.3590
Authors (yr) | Subjects | Setting | Genders | Population | Gender preference |
Fidler et al[14], 2000 | Patients undergoing colonoscopy | Endoscopy | Both | United Kingdom | Women (48%) and men (0%) |
Varadarajulu et al[15], 2002 | Patients undergoing colonoscopy | Endoscopy | Both | United States | Overall (26%): Women (45%) and men (4.3%). No difference post procedure |
Menees et al[16], 2005 | Subjects not scheduled | Clinics | Female | United States | 44.4% expressed preference [endoscopist: Women (43%) and men (1.4%)] |
Lee et al[17], 2008 | Subjects not scheduled for colonoscopy | Clinics | Female | South Korea | 45.5% expressed preference [endoscopist: Women (32.1%) and men (13.4%)] |
Schneider et al[18], 2009 | Patients undergoing colonoscopy | Endoscopy | Both | United States | Women (42%) and men (24%) |
Zapatier et al[19], 2011 | Patients not scheduled for colonoscopy | Clinics | Both | United States | Overall (25.7%): Women (30.8%) and men (20.4%); women: Hispanic (35%) and Caucasian; men (20.4%): Hispanic men |
Shah et al[20], 2011 | Patients not scheduled for colonoscopy | Primary clinics | Both | United States | Patients: Women (53%) and men (27.8%); Health care professionals: Women (43.1%) and men (26.1%) |
Present study, 2012 | Subjects not scheduled for colonoscopy | Clinics | Both | Southeast Asia | Endoscopists: Women (70%; women 67.7% and men 2.3%); men (62.8%; women 6.8% and 56% men)Assistants: Women (74.5%; women 73.4% and men 1.1%); men (58%; women 8.7% and 49.3% men) |
- Citation: Chong VH. Gender preference and implications for screening colonoscopy: Impact of endoscopy nurses. World J Gastroenterol 2012; 18(27): 3590-3594
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v18/i27/3590.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v18.i27.3590