University of Global Health Equity, Kigali Heights, Plot 772, KG 7 Ave, Floor 5, Kigali, Rwanda.
BMC Med Educ. 2019 Jun 6;19(1):189. doi: 10.1186/s12909-019-1639-2.
Whether medical education research (MER) is primarily conducted in wealthy countries (in the "Realm of the Rich") is the subject of an ongoing debate. Previous studies of the geography of MER publication output have relied upon proprietary databases, have not compared MER with other fields of study, and have not studied the relationship between authorship geography and topics of study. This study was designed to evaluate the geographic distribution of MER authorship and to relate this to the topics studied in MER.
Authors' countries of affiliation were identified from PubMed records by parsing and cleaning the text of affiliations and submitting them to the google maps geocoding API. The geography of publication output in MER was compared to other fields using the chi-square goodness-of-fit test. Country income classifications and medical subject heading (MeSH) terms were used to evaluate the topical contributions of countries at different income levels, and simulation was used to compute significance of MeSH term enrichment in MER papers from low income and lower middle income countries.
The vast majority of MER papers were contributed by authors based in high income countries. The top four countries were the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia, with listed author affiliations in 80% of all MER papers. This percentage was greater in MER than in several other categories, including Biological Science Disciplines (48%), Medicine (69%) and Education (74%), which is a parent category of MER. Authors from low income countries contributed significantly to the topical diversity of MER. MeSH terms associated with government, community health, and health delivery were enriched in papers from low income countries, while terms associated with specialty and clinical training, technology in teaching, and professional obligations (such as workload, burnout, and empathy) were enriched in papers from high income countries.
Geographic disparities in publication output are greater in MER than in any other field examined. The historical origins of MER in North America might explain disproportionate publication output by authors from this region. This study suggests that the MER field benefits from research contributed by authors from low income countries, and also points to potential gaps in MER (and medical education as a whole) in the developing world.
医学教育研究(MER)主要在富裕国家(“富域”)进行,这是一个正在进行的争论。先前关于 MER 出版产出地理分布的研究依赖于专有数据库,没有将 MER 与其他研究领域进行比较,也没有研究作者地理与研究主题之间的关系。本研究旨在评估 MER 作者的地理分布,并将其与 MER 研究的主题相关联。
通过解析和清理隶属关系的文本并将其提交给谷歌地图地理编码 API,从 PubMed 记录中确定作者的所属国家。使用卡方拟合优度检验比较 MER 出版产出的地理分布与其他领域。使用国家收入分类和医学主题词(MeSH)术语来评估不同收入水平国家的主题贡献,并使用模拟计算来自低收入和中下收入国家的 MER 论文中 MeSH 术语富集的显著性。
绝大多数 MER 论文的作者都来自高收入国家。前四个国家是美国、英国、加拿大和澳大利亚,它们在所有 MER 论文中列出了作者的隶属关系,占 80%。这一比例在 MER 中高于其他几个类别,包括生物科学学科(48%)、医学(69%)和教育(74%),MER 是后者的一个母类。来自低收入国家的作者对 MER 的主题多样性做出了重大贡献。与政府、社区卫生和医疗服务相关的 MeSH 术语在来自低收入国家的论文中得到了丰富,而与专业和临床培训、教学中的技术以及专业义务(如工作量、倦怠和同理心)相关的术语在来自高收入国家的论文中得到了丰富。
MER 的出版产出在地理分布上的差异大于任何其他研究领域。MER 在北美的历史起源可能解释了该地区作者不成比例的出版产出。本研究表明,MER 领域受益于来自低收入国家作者的研究贡献,也指出了发展中国家 MER(以及整个医学教育)可能存在的差距。