Khanali Javad, Malekpour Mohammad-Reza, Kolahi Ali-Asghar
Social Determinants of Health Research Center, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Jan 9;21(1):105. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-10116-6.
When a new or re-emergent pathogen, such as SARS-CoV-2, causes a major outbreak, rapid access to pertinent research findings is crucial for planning strategies and decision making. We researched whether the speed of sharing research results in the COVID-19 epidemic was higher than the SARS and Ebola epidemics. We also researched whether there is any difference in the most frequent topics investigated before and after the COVID-19, SARS, and Ebola epidemics started.
We used PubMed database search tools to determine the time-period it took for the number of articles to rise after the epidemics started and the most frequent topics assigned to the articles.
The main results were, first, the rise in the number of articles occurred 6 weeks after the COVID-19 epidemic started whereas, this rise occurred 4 months after the SARS and 7 months after the Ebola epidemics started. Second, etiology, statistics & numerical data, and epidemiology were the three most frequent topics investigated in the COVID-19 epidemic. However, etiology, microbiology, and genetics in the SARS epidemic, and statistics & numerical data, epidemiology, and prevention & control in the Ebola epidemic were more frequently studied compared with other topics. Third, some topics were studied more frequently after the epidemics started.
The speed of sharing results in the COVID-19 epidemic was much higher than the SARS and Ebola epidemics, and that there is a difference in the most frequent articles' topics investigated in these three epidemics. Due to the value of time in controlling epidemics spread, the study highlights the necessity of defining more solutions for rapidly providing pertinent research findings in fighting against the next public health emergency.
当一种新出现或再次出现的病原体,如严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)引发重大疫情时,快速获取相关研究结果对于制定策略和决策至关重要。我们研究了在2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)疫情中研究结果的共享速度是否高于非典(SARS)和埃博拉疫情。我们还研究了在COVID-19、SARS和埃博拉疫情开始之前和之后所调查的最常见主题是否存在差异。
我们使用PubMed数据库搜索工具来确定疫情开始后文章数量增加所需的时间以及分配给文章的最常见主题。
主要结果如下,首先,COVID-19疫情开始6周后文章数量开始增加,而SARS疫情开始4个月后、埃博拉疫情开始7个月后文章数量才开始增加。其次,病因学、统计与数值数据以及流行病学是COVID-19疫情中研究的三个最常见主题。然而,与其他主题相比,SARS疫情中的病因学、微生物学和遗传学,以及埃博拉疫情中的统计与数值数据、流行病学和预防与控制研究得更为频繁。第三,一些主题在疫情开始后研究得更为频繁。
COVID-19疫情中研究结果的共享速度远高于SARS和埃博拉疫情,并且这三种疫情中研究的最常见文章主题存在差异。由于时间对于控制疫情传播的价值,该研究强调了为在下一次公共卫生紧急事件中快速提供相关研究结果确定更多解决方案的必要性。