Robert Graham Center, Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care, Washington DC, USA; and Department of Health Systems and Population Health Sciences, University of Houston, College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77204, USA; and Corresponding author. Email:
American Board of Family Medicine in Lexington, Kentucky, USA; and Center for Professionalism and Value in Health Care in Washington, DC, USA.
J Prim Health Care. 2020 Jun;12(2):149-158. doi: 10.1071/HC19098.
INTRODUCTION Measurement of family medicine research productivity has lacked the replicable methodology needed to document progress. AIM In this study, we compared three methods: (1) faculty-to-publications; (2) publications-to-faculty; and (3) department-reported publications. METHODS In this cross-sectional analysis, publications in peer-reviewed, indexed journals for faculty in 13 US family medicine departments in 2015 were assessed. In the faculty-to-publications method, department websites to identify faculty and Web of Science to identify publications were used. For the publications-to-faculty method, PubMed's author affiliation field were used to identify publications, which were linked to faculty members. In the department-reported method, chairs provided lists of faculty and their publications. For each method, descriptive statistics to compare faculty and publication counts were calculated. RESULTS Overall, 750 faculty members with 1052 unique publications, using all three methods combined as the reference standard, were identified. The department-reported method revealed 878 publications (84%), compared to 616 (59%) for the faculty-to-publications method and 412 (39%) for the publication-to-faculty method. Across all departments, 32% of faculty had any publications, and the mean number of publications per faculty was 1.4 (mean of 4.4 per faculty among those who had published). Assistant Professors, Associate Professors, Professors and Chairs accounted for 92% of all publications. DISCUSSION Online searches capture a fraction of publications, but also capture publications missed through self-report. The ideal methodology includes all three. Tracking publications is important for quantifying the return on our discipline's research investment.
家庭医学研究生产力的衡量缺乏可复制的方法学,无法记录进展。
本研究比较了三种方法:(1)教师与出版物;(2)出版物与教师;(3)系部报告出版物。
在这项横断面分析中,评估了 2015 年美国 13 个家庭医学系的教师在同行评议、索引期刊上发表的论文。在教师与出版物方法中,使用系部网站识别教师和 Web of Science 识别出版物。在出版物与教师方法中,使用 PubMed 的作者隶属字段识别出版物,并将其与教师联系起来。在系部报告方法中,主席提供了教师及其出版物的名单。对于每种方法,都计算了描述性统计数据以比较教师和出版物的数量。
总共确定了 750 名教师,有 1052 篇唯一的出版物,使用所有三种方法作为参考标准。系部报告方法显示有 878 篇出版物(84%),而教师与出版物方法为 616 篇(59%),出版物与教师方法为 412 篇(39%)。在所有系部中,32%的教师有任何出版物,每位教师的平均出版物数量为 1.4 篇(发表过论文的教师平均每人 4.4 篇)。助理教授、副教授、教授和主席占所有出版物的 92%。
在线搜索仅捕获了部分出版物,但也捕获了通过自我报告错过的出版物。理想的方法学包括所有三种方法。跟踪出版物对于量化我们学科研究投资的回报非常重要。