Disparities in Global Authorship and Data Source in the Pediatric Blood and Cancer Journal 2011-2021: Realities and Strategies for Improvement.

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q2 HEMATOLOGY Pediatric Blood & Cancer Pub Date : 2024-11-07 DOI:10.1002/pbc.31413
Kathryn Burns, Alexandra Martiniuk, Md Irteja Islam, Dominic Agyemang Opoku, Yuanhui Luo, Dorcas Malahlela, Anita Pickard, Elizabeth Sniderman, Julia Challinor
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Abstract

Background: Research expands knowledge and improves outcomes. Research is needed in all settings, but most often occurs in high-income countries (HIC) compared to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Publication in scientific peer-reviewed journals and authorship position are important for academic/clinical advancement. We explored the current state of global authorship and data source distribution for publications in the Pediatric Blood and Cancer (PBC) journal.

Procedure: LMIC-affiliated author inclusion and position in selected article categories of the PBC (2011-2021) were recorded. Articles with at least one LMIC-affiliated author (first-listed affiliation) and 5% of exclusively HIC-authored articles were verified. Descriptive statistical analysis was performed.

Results: Of 4504 articles reviewed, 593 (13%) included at least one LMIC-affiliated author (517/593 [87%] as first author and 488/593 [82%]) as senior author. In a subset of articles with LMIC-sourced data, 148/675 (22%) included exclusively HIC authors. Within the LMIC-sourced data subset, 81/675 (12%) articles were mixed HIC/LMIC affiliation and 446/675 (66%) were exclusively LMIC-affiliated. The frequency of LMIC-affiliated authors as first or senior author within HIC/LMIC-affiliated collaborations was 31/81 (38%) and 9/81 (11%), respectively.

Conclusion: As more than 80% of children live in LMICs and the WHO Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer is increasingly engaged across LMICs, all researchers/clinicians must justly be given an opportunity to conduct, write, publish, and be recognized for their research. PBC is uniquely poised to promote equitable publishing practices and opportunities for professional recognition by drawing on emerging best practices for equitable authorship, including potentially restructuring authorship guidelines and requirements.

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2011-2021 年《儿科血液与癌症杂志》全球作者和数据来源的差异:现实与改进策略》。
背景:研究可以拓展知识,改善成果。所有环境都需要研究,但与中低收入国家(LMIC)相比,高收入国家(HIC)最需要研究。在同行评审的科学期刊上发表论文和担任作者职务对于学术/临床进步非常重要。我们探讨了《儿科血液与癌症》(PBC)期刊上发表文章的全球作者和数据源分布现状:我们记录了《儿科血液与癌症》(PBC)杂志(2011-2021 年)所选文章类别中隶属于低收入与中等收入国家的作者的加入情况和位置。对至少有一位低收入和中等收入国家作者(第一作者单位)的文章以及5%完全由低收入和中等收入国家作者撰写的文章进行了核实。进行了描述性统计分析:在所审查的 4504 篇文章中,有 593 篇(13%)至少有一位隶属于低收入、中等收入国家的作者(517/593 [87%] 为第一作者,488/593 [82%] 为资深作者)。在数据来源于低收入与中等收入国家的文章子集中,有 148/675 篇文章(22%)的作者完全是低收入与中等收入国家的作者。在低收入与中等收入国家数据来源子集中,81/675(12%)篇文章属于低收入与中等收入国家,446/675(66%)篇文章完全属于低收入与中等收入国家。在与高收入国家/低收入国家的合作中,低收入国家作者作为第一作者或资深作者的频率分别为31/81(38%)和9/81(11%):由于 80% 以上的儿童生活在低收入与中等收入国家,而且世界卫生组织儿童癌症全球倡议在低收入与中等收入国家的参与度越来越高,所有研究人员/临床医生都必须有机会开展研究、撰写论文、发表文章并获得认可。PBC 具有得天独厚的优势,可以通过借鉴新兴的公平作者资格最佳实践,包括可能调整作者资格准则和要求,促进公平的出版实践和专业认可机会。
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来源期刊
Pediatric Blood & Cancer
Pediatric Blood & Cancer 医学-小儿科
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
9.40%
发文量
546
审稿时长
1.5 months
期刊介绍: Pediatric Blood & Cancer publishes the highest quality manuscripts describing basic and clinical investigations of blood disorders and malignant diseases of childhood including diagnosis, treatment, epidemiology, etiology, biology, and molecular and clinical genetics of these diseases as they affect children, adolescents, and young adults. Pediatric Blood & Cancer will also include studies on such treatment options as hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, immunology, and gene therapy.
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