MacKinney Erin C, Chun Robert H, Cassidy Laura D, Link T Roxanne, Sulman Cecille G, Kerschner Joseph E
Medical College of Wisconsin, 8700 W Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53226, United States.
Medical College of Wisconsin, 8700 W Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53226, United States; Division of Pediatric Otolaryngology, 9000 W Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53226, United States; Department of Otolaryngology and Communication Sciences, 9000 W Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53226, United States.
Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2015 Mar;79(3):392-7. doi: 10.1016/j.ijporl.2014.12.035. Epub 2015 Jan 6.
To analyze factors associated with progression of an original scientific presentation at the American Society of Pediatric Otolaryngology (ASPO) Annual Meeting to publication in a peer-reviewed journal. A dataset of presenters was created to enable prospective follow-up to assess early impressions regarding publication success with longer-term publication outcomes.
Prior to the Annual ASPO meeting in 2013, a survey consisting of 10 questions was e-mailed to all 59 presenters. Questions were designed to assess presenter expectations on publication, barriers to publishing, and experience in presenting, publishing and clinical practice. A second survey was sent 12 months later to those respondents of the first survey who were amenable to follow-up.
Overall, 46 of 59 (78%) presenters responded to the initial survey prior to their ASPO 2013 presentation. Of these, 34 agreed to participate in a longer-term follow-up of their presentation to publication experience. Of these 34, there were 17 who participated in the follow-up survey 1 year later. Just under half of the original respondents were residents (46%). All presenters (100%) planned to re-submit a revised manuscript if initially rejected. However, 35% of follow-up respondents did not make initial submission to a peer-reviewed journal. Results of a descriptive analysis suggest that more experienced researchers expect their submitted manuscript to be accepted for publication within a shorter time frame than those that have published fewer papers. Time was ranked as the greatest barrier to publication (60%) of those surveyed both in the initial prospective survey and for those who did not publish a paper in the follow-up survey (83%).
This study suggests a strong desire and expectation of publishing ASPO presentations. Despite this expectation, past research and this data set suggest this expectation often does not materialize. "Time constraints" were the most commonly identified barrier to publication. To enhance dissemination of new findings from ASPO meetings, institutions and individuals should examine methods that facilitate and incentivize publication of findings in peer-reviewed publications.
分析在美国儿科学会耳鼻喉科(ASPO)年会上最初发表的科学报告在同行评审期刊上发表的相关因素。创建了一个报告者数据集,以便进行前瞻性随访,以评估关于发表成功的早期印象以及长期发表结果。
在2013年ASPO年会之前,向所有59位报告者发送了一份包含10个问题的调查问卷。问题旨在评估报告者对发表的期望、发表的障碍以及报告、发表和临床实践方面的经验。12个月后,向第一次调查中愿意接受随访的受访者发送了第二次调查问卷。
总体而言,59位报告者中有46位(78%)在2013年ASPO报告之前回复了初始调查问卷。其中,34位同意参与对其报告发表经历的长期随访。在这34位中,有17位在1年后参与了随访调查。最初的受访者中略少于一半是住院医师(46%)。所有报告者(100%)计划如果最初被拒就重新提交修订后的稿件。然而,35%的随访受访者没有向同行评审期刊进行首次投稿。描述性分析结果表明,经验更丰富的研究人员期望他们提交的稿件比发表论文较少的研究人员在更短的时间内被接受发表。在最初的前瞻性调查以及在随访调查中未发表论文的受访者中(83%),时间被列为发表的最大障碍(60%)。
本研究表明,人们对发表ASPO报告有着强烈的愿望和期望。尽管有这种期望,但过去的研究和本数据集表明这种期望往往无法实现。“时间限制”是最常被提及的发表障碍。为了加强ASPO会议新发现的传播,机构和个人应研究有助于并激励在同行评审出版物上发表研究结果的方法。