A 15-Year Bibliometric Analysis of Sports Medicine Studies in The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery: A Systematic Review.

IF 2.3 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS JBJS Open Access Pub Date : 2024-12-03 eCollection Date: 2024-10-01 DOI:10.2106/JBJS.OA.24.00045
Amanda B Watters, Jack Blitz, Tatjana Mortell, Victoria K Ierulli, John Lefante, Mary K Mulcahey
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Abstract

Background: Orthopaedic sports medicine is among the most popular subspecialties. Understanding the trends in sports medicine research over time can offer insight into progress and innovation within the field. The purpose of this study was to assess both the quality of the current literature and trends in gender diversity and inclusion by evaluating publishing characteristics of sports medicine studies in The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-American Volume (JBJS-A) from 2007 to 2021.

Methods: Sports medicine studies in JBJS-A from 2007 to 2021 were identified using JBJS subspeciality tags for "sports medicine" articles and organized by study type, number of authors, sex of the authors, academic degree(s) of the first and last authors, level of evidence, country of publication, citations, and use of patient-reported outcomes (PROM).

Results: A total of 784 studies were reviewed, and 513 met inclusion criteria. Clinical therapeutic studies were the most common publication (48%). There was an increase in the publication of clinical prognostic studies (17%-25%, p = 0.037) and a significant increase in the use of PROM measures over time (13%-47%, p < 0.001). The total number of authors increased over the study period (4.8-6.3), but there was no significant increase in female authorship. Only 15% of the 784 studies included a female author, with an average of 0.8 female authors per article (range 0-8) compared with 4.6 males (range 1-14).

Conclusion: The significant increase in the use of PROMs in sports medicine studies indicates that the quality of research has improved over the 15-year period. The gender disparity in authorship has remained stagnant. Only 11% of all first authors and 9% of senior authors were female. The number of included international studies improved over time; however, the United States remains the most prolific publisher. Despite these areas of growth, this study suggests that there is room for improvement of authorship gender diversity in orthopaedic sports medicine research.

Level of evidence: Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

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《骨与关节外科杂志》运动医学研究的15年文献计量学分析:系统回顾。
背景:骨科运动医学是最受欢迎的专科之一。随着时间的推移,了解运动医学研究的趋势可以洞察该领域的进步和创新。本研究的目的是通过评估2007年至2021年在《骨与关节外科杂志-美国卷》(jbjms - a)上发表的运动医学研究的出版特征,评估当前文献的质量以及性别多样性和包容性的趋势。方法:使用JBJS“运动医学”文章的亚专业标签对JBJS- a中2007年至2021年的运动医学研究进行识别,并按研究类型、作者数量、作者性别、第一作者和最后作者的学位、证据水平、出版国家、引文和患者报告结果(PROM)的使用进行组织。结果:共纳入784项研究,513项符合纳入标准。临床治疗研究是最常见的出版物(48%)。临床预后研究的发表增加(17%-25%,p = 0.037),随着时间的推移,PROM测量的使用显著增加(13%-47%,p < 0.001)。在研究期间,作者总数有所增加(4.8-6.3),但女性作者数量没有显著增加。784篇研究中只有15%包含女性作者,平均每篇文章有0.8位女性作者(范围0-8),而男性有4.6位(范围1-14)。结论:在运动医学研究中使用PROMs的显著增加表明,在过去的15年中,研究质量得到了提高。作者数量上的性别差异一直没有改变。只有11%的第一作者和9%的资深作者是女性。随着时间的推移,纳入的国际研究的数量有所增加;然而,美国仍然是最多产的出版商。尽管有这些领域的增长,本研究表明,在骨科运动医学研究中,作者性别多样性仍有改进的空间。证据等级:三级。有关证据水平的完整描述,请参见作者说明。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JBJS Open Access
JBJS Open Access Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
77
审稿时长
6 weeks
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