Human health and climate change – an evolving discourse: A bibliometric citation analysis of top-cited articles within health sciences databases

Maya R. Kolsky , Ehud Grossman , Yuval Levy , Eyal Klang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

The body of scientific literature on climate change and human health has exponentially grown over the past two decades, outlining a diverse list of health risks, vulnerable populations, protocols, and public policy frameworks. However, not all of these topics resonated equally among the health sciences community. This bibliometric citation analysis sets out to explore the priorities and interests reflected in the top cited articles on climate change and human health.

Methods

We searched the PubMed database for all publications containing the term "climate change" in either title, abstract, or keywords, published after January 1st, 2009. The NCBI Entrez API was used to collect citation counts for the retrieved articles. The search yielded 55,590 articles. The top 200 cited publications were manually analyzed and classified according to topic and type of article.

Findings

: Out of the 200 top-cited articles containing “Climate change” in either the title, abstract, or keywords, 40 articles engaged directly with human health or food security, receiving a total of 13,857 citations, with a range of 233–1865 citations (mean = 407.5, median = 316). Only 11 of the 40 articles were original studies. Infectious diseases were discussed in 24 of the 40 articles - 23 discuss vector-borne diseases. In comparison, only 11 refer to temperature extremes, 10 discuss nutritional insecurity and only 3 discuss migration and climate refugees. 50.9 % of all citations were published in either “Science” or “The Lancet”.

Interpretation

While climate change and human health had captured the attention of public policymakers, the consistent selection of resources and topics – favoring the Lancet commissions over environmental health publications and the IPCC, citing infectious diseases more frequently than mental health, air pollution, and extreme weather, and the overall relatively low number of citations – could indicate a low level of interest amongst the broader health sciences community.

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人类健康和气候变化——一个不断发展的话语:健康科学数据库中被引用最多的文章的文献计量引文分析
在过去二十年中,关于气候变化与人类健康的科学文献呈指数级增长,概述了一系列不同的健康风险、弱势群体、协议和公共政策框架。然而,并不是所有这些话题都在健康科学界引起了同样的共鸣。这项文献计量引文分析旨在探索在气候变化和人类健康方面被引用最多的文章中所反映的优先事项和利益。方法我们在PubMed数据库中检索2009年1月1日以后发表的所有在标题、摘要或关键词中包含“气候变化”一词的出版物。NCBI Entrez API用于收集检索文章的引用计数。搜索结果为55590篇文章。根据文章的主题和类型,人工分析和分类了前200个被引用的出版物。结果:在200篇被引次数最多的文章中,标题、摘要或关键词中包含“气候变化”,其中40篇文章直接涉及人类健康或食品安全,共被引用13857次,引用范围为233-1865次(平均值= 407.5,中位数= 316)。40篇文章中只有11篇是原创研究。40篇文章中有24篇讨论了传染病,23篇讨论了病媒传播的疾病。相比之下,只有11份报告提到了极端温度,10份报告讨论了营养不安全,只有3份报告讨论了移民和气候难民。50.9%的引用发表在《科学》或《柳叶刀》上。虽然气候变化和人类健康已经引起了公共政策制定者的注意,但资源和主题的一致选择——更倾向于《柳叶刀》委员会而不是环境卫生出版物和IPCC,引用传染病的频率高于精神健康、空气污染和极端天气,以及总体上相对较少的引用数量——可能表明更广泛的健康科学界的兴趣水平较低。
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来源期刊
The journal of climate change and health
The journal of climate change and health Global and Planetary Change, Public Health and Health Policy
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
68 days
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