The recommendations by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) provide clear guidelines on the selection, description, and representation of study participants. The guidelines emphasize including representative populations in all study types and, at the very least, providing descriptive data for age, sex, ethnicity, and other relevant demographic variables [1]. As of April 7, 2023, there are 280 medical journals in Korea, of which 55 are indexed in the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE). It is necessary to investigate the extent to which the 55 SCIE-indexed medical journals in Korea adhere to and implement the ICMJE guidelines on gender equity in their publications. This evaluation involves checking for explicit sex/gender distinctions in the articles and, when missing, seeking justifications and sex/gender-specific interpretations.The sample included all SCIE-indexed journals published by member organizations of the Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors as of April 7, 2023. The websites of the 55 journals were visited to check for ICMJE guideline adherence. From journals stating that they follow these guidelines, one original article was selected and examined for sex/gender distinction. Cases where sex/gender-differentiated descriptions were not applicable were excluded. The variables included data reflecting sex/gender differences, reasons given when no sex/gender distinction was made, and the interpretation of sex/gender data (Dataset 1). Of the 55 journals, one did not have a statement regarding the ICMJE recommendations and was excluded from the study, leaving 54 for analysis. Table 1 displays the primary results.As Table 1 indicates, out of 38 articles, excluding 16 that were not applicable, nine (23.7%) did not distinguish participants according to sex or gender, 18 (47.4%) did not provide a sex/