Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Can J Neurol Sci. 2020 Sep;47(5):666-674. doi: 10.1017/cjn.2020.103. Epub 2020 May 28.
Many neurosurgeons pursue graduate degrees as part of their training. In some jurisdictions, graduate degrees are considered a necessary condition of employment in academic neurosurgery. However, the relationship between possession of a graduate degree and eventual research productivity is not well established. We used bibliometric methods to analyze publications from academic Canadian neurosurgeons, with an emphasis on level of graduate training.
All neurosurgeons holding academic appointments at Canadian institutions from 2012-2016 were included. Over that time frame, Scopus was used to quantify the number of papers, number of citations, 5-year h-index and 5-year r-index, CiteScore, authorship position, and paper type (clinical or basic science). Publication output was compared between neurosurgeons grouped as MD-only, MD-Masters, or MD-PhD.
In total, 2557 abstracts from 131 Canadian neurosurgeons were analyzed. We found that MD-Masters neurosurgeons published significantly more total papers, clinical papers, and first/last author papers than MD-only neurosurgeons. MD-PhD neurosurgeons had the same findings, in addition to more basic science papers, in journals with a higher CiteScore, 5-year h-index, and 5-year r-index than both other groups. These results were preserved even with significant outliers removed. There was no difference if graduate degrees were obtained before or after starting residency. There was no correlation with career length and number of recent papers published.
The attainment of a graduate degree has an important association with future publication productivity for academic neurosurgeons. These data should be useful for hiring committees considering the value of graduate degrees from applicants for positions in academic neurosurgery.
许多神经外科医生在培训过程中攻读研究生学位。在某些司法管辖区,研究生学位被认为是在学术神经外科就业的必要条件。然而,拥有研究生学位与最终研究生产力之间的关系尚未得到很好的确立。我们使用文献计量学方法分析了来自加拿大学术神经外科医生的出版物,重点是研究生培训水平。
所有在 2012-2016 年期间在加拿大机构担任学术职务的神经外科医生均包括在内。在此期间,Scopus 用于量化论文数量、引用次数、5 年 h 指数和 5 年 r 指数、CiteScore、作者身份和论文类型(临床或基础科学)。根据神经外科医生的分组(仅 MD、MD-Masters 或 MD-PhD)比较出版物产出。
总共分析了来自 131 位加拿大神经外科医生的 2557 篇摘要。我们发现,MD-Masters 神经外科医生发表的总论文、临床论文和第一/最后作者论文数量明显多于仅 MD 的神经外科医生。MD-PhD 神经外科医生除了在 CiteScore、5 年 h 指数和 5 年 r 指数较高的期刊上发表更多基础科学论文外,还具有相同的发现。即使去除了显著的异常值,这些结果仍然保留。研究生学位是在住院医师之前还是之后获得,并没有区别。与职业长度和最近发表的论文数量也没有相关性。
获得研究生学位与学术神经外科医生未来的出版生产力有重要关联。这些数据对于考虑学术神经外科职位申请人研究生学位价值的招聘委员会应该是有用的。