Department of Internal Medicine, Wyckoff Heights Medical Center, 374 Stockholm Street, Brooklyn, NY 11237, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine, Alaska Native Medical Center, 4315 Diplomacy Drive, Anchorage, AK 99508, USA.
J Epidemiol Glob Health. 2021 Mar;11(1):92-97. doi: 10.2991/jegh.k.200325.001. Epub 2020 Apr 8.
The globalization of medical research and global health's increasing popularity worldwide have resulted in greater geographic, ethnic, and socioeconomic diversity of studies published in the scientific literature. Yet the geographic distribution, authorship representation, and subject trends among Low-/Low-Middle-Income Country (LIC/LMIC)-based scientific publications remain largely unknown. This analysis assesses these gaps in knowledge. We performed a comprehensive bibliometric analysis of all scientific articles published between January 2014 and June 2016 in the four most prominent general medicine and five most prominent general global health journals based on impact factor. The African region, containing 24% of the global LIC/LMIC population, accounted for 49.9% of all publications. Corresponding authors with either exclusive or joint appointment to a LIC/LMIC institution were present in 26.2% of all included articles. Over one-quarter (28.8%) of all publications did not list a local author. Nearly two-thirds (62.1%) of articles published in global health journals and roughly half (52.4%) in general medicine journals involved infectious diseases. Non-HIV infectious disease studies were by far the most frequent subject areas across all journals. The trends identified in this study may help to inform the evolution and prioritization of future research efforts, thereby allowing global health to remain truly global.
医学研究的全球化以及全球健康在世界范围内的日益普及,使得发表在科学文献中的研究在地理、种族和社会经济方面更加多样化。然而,基于低/中低收入国家(LIC/LMIC)的科学出版物的地理分布、作者代表性和主题趋势在很大程度上仍然未知。本分析评估了这些知识差距。我们对基于影响因子的四种最著名的一般医学期刊和五种最著名的一般全球健康期刊在 2014 年 1 月至 2016 年 6 月期间发表的所有科学文章进行了全面的文献计量分析。非洲区域拥有全球 24%的 LIC/LMIC 人口,占所有出版物的 49.9%。在所有纳入的文章中,有 26.2%的文章的通讯作者仅在 LIC/LMIC 机构任职,或者与 LIC/LMIC 机构有联合任命。超过四分之一(28.8%)的出版物没有列出当地作者。在全球健康期刊上发表的近三分之二(62.1%)和一般医学期刊上发表的约一半(52.4%)的文章涉及传染病。非 HIV 传染病研究是所有期刊中最常见的主题领域。本研究中确定的趋势可能有助于为未来的研究工作提供信息并确定其优先次序,从而使全球健康真正全球化。