Peer-reviewed publications in orthopaedic surgery from lower income countries: A comparative analysis.

IF 1.8 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS SICOT-J Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-01 DOI:10.1051/sicotj/2023039
Sanjeev Sabharwal, Andrea Leung, Patricia Rodarte, Gurbinder Singh, Joel Johansen Bwemelo, Annelise S Taylor, Josephine Tan, Richard Trott
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Abstract

Introduction: Musculoskeletal (MSK) disease is a substantial global burden, especially in lower income countries. However, limited research has been published on MSK health by scholars from these countries. We aimed to study the distribution of authorships, including trends in peer-reviewed orthopaedic publications based on each author's affiliated institution's country income status.

Methods: Based on a bibliometric search, 119 orthopaedic-related journals were identified using the Journal Citation Reports database. Details of all scientific articles published in these journals between 2012 and 2021 were used to study trends and association between each of the author's affiliated institution's country income status, using the World Bank Classification.

Results: Of the 133,718 unique articles, 87.6% had at least one author affiliation from a high-income country (HIC), 7.0% from an upper-middle income country (UMIC), 5.2% from a lower-middle income country (LMIC), and 0.2% from a low-income country (LIC). Overall, these articles were cited 1,825,365 times, with 92.5% of citations from HIC-affiliated authors and < 0.1% from LIC-affiliated authors. Over the 10-year study period, HIC-affiliated articles demonstrated the largest increase in the number of publications (9107-14,619), compared to UMIC-affiliated (495-1214), LMIC-affiliated (406-874), and LIC-affiliated articles (4-28).

Conclusions: There are large and persistent disparities in orthopaedic research publications based on the country income status of the author's affiliated institution, especially in the higher impact orthopaedic journals. Efforts should be made to increase opportunities for scholars from LICs and LMICs to publish their research in high-impact orthopaedic journals.

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来自低收入国家的矫形外科同行评审出版物:比较分析。
导言:肌肉骨骼(MSK)疾病是一个沉重的全球性负担,尤其是在低收入国家。然而,来自这些国家的学者发表的有关 MSK 健康的研究却很有限。我们的目的是研究作者的分布情况,包括根据每位作者所属机构的国家收入状况,研究同行评审骨科出版物的趋势:方法:根据文献计量学检索,使用期刊引文报告数据库确定了 119 种骨科相关期刊。使用世界银行分类法,对这些期刊在 2012 年至 2021 年间发表的所有科学论文的详细信息进行了研究,以了解趋势以及各作者所属机构的国家收入状况之间的关联:在 133718 篇文章中,87.6% 的文章至少有一位作者来自高收入国家(HIC),7.0% 来自中上收入国家(UMIC),5.2% 来自中低收入国家(LMIC),0.2% 来自低收入国家(LIC)。总体而言,这些文章被引用了1,825,365次,其中92.5%的引用来自高收入国家的作者:根据作者所属机构的国家收入状况,骨科研究论文的发表存在巨大且持续的差距,尤其是在影响力较大的骨科期刊上。应努力增加低收入和中等收入国家学者在影响力较大的骨科期刊上发表研究成果的机会。
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来源期刊
SICOT-J
SICOT-J ORTHOPEDICS-
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
12.50%
发文量
44
审稿时长
14 weeks
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