Liu Ivan Z, Wang Kevin Y, Robin Joseph X, McGeary Ian, Hemal Kshipra, Boyd Carter J
The Medical College of Georgia, Augusta University, 1120 15th St, Augusta, GA, 30912, United States.
Wake Forest School of Medicine, 475 Vine St, Winston-Salem, NC, 27101, United States.
J Orthop. 2021 Jul-Aug;26:107-110. doi: 10.1016/j.jor.2021.07.016. Epub 2021 Jul 21.
The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has had a significant impact on orthopedic surgery practice, but there has been little investigation of the effects of COVID-19 on the orthopedic surgery literature. Additionally, because orthopedic research plays a vital role in physician education, changes to the characteristics and content of published literature can have lasting impacts on future teaching and learning. This paper represents the first known analysis of the COVID-19 pandemic's impact on peer-reviewed articles published in orthopedic surgery journals.
The 20 orthopedic journals with the highest impact factors in 2019, according to the , were included in this study. Using PubMed and COVID-19 related keywords as well as manual screening, a final count of 199 articles were assessed for this study and subsequently sorted by country of origin, orthopedic subspecialty, article type, and general theme. Kruskal Wallis and Pearson's Chi-squared tests were used to analyze continuous and categorical variables, respectively.
Fourteen journals published articles relating to COVID-19, representing 26 countries with the United States (37%) and United Kingdom (13%) publishing the greatest proportion of all COVID-19 articles. Sixty percent of publications discussed COVID-19's impact on the overall field of orthopedic surgery, with the remainder focusing on specific subspecialties. Forty-seven percent of publications were original research articles while 46% were editorials or commentaries. The median time to publication for all COVID-19 related articles was 24.5 days, compared to the 129 days reported for orthopedic journals prior to the COVID-19 pandemic (p < 0.001). In the first 100 articles published, 49% (n = 49) originated exclusively from United States institutions, whereas only 25% (n = 25) of the next ninety-nine articles had US-only institutions (p < 0.001).
The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly impacted the characteristics, content, and time to publication of the orthopedic surgery literature. The data and ideas presented in this paper should help streamline future, formal analysis on the lasting implications of COVID-19 on orthopedic surgery practice, teaching, and learning.
新型冠状病毒病(COVID-19)对骨科手术实践产生了重大影响,但关于COVID-19对骨科手术文献影响的研究却很少。此外,由于骨科研究在医师教育中起着至关重要的作用,已发表文献的特征和内容的变化可能会对未来的教学产生持久影响。本文是对COVID-19大流行对骨科手术期刊上发表的同行评审文章影响的首次已知分析。
根据[具体来源未给出],2019年影响因子最高的20种骨科期刊被纳入本研究。使用PubMed和与COVID-19相关的关键词以及人工筛选,本研究最终评估了199篇文章,并随后按原产国、骨科亚专业、文章类型和一般主题进行分类。分别使用Kruskal Wallis检验和Pearson卡方检验来分析连续变量和分类变量。
14种期刊发表了与COVID-19相关的文章,涉及26个国家,其中美国(37%)和英国(13%)发表的COVID-19文章占比最大。60%的出版物讨论了COVID-19对骨科手术整个领域的影响,其余部分则侧重于特定亚专业。47%的出版物是原创研究文章,而46%是社论或评论。所有与COVID-19相关文章的中位发表时间为24.5天,而在COVID-19大流行之前骨科期刊报告的中位发表时间为129天(p < 0.001)。在发表的前100篇文章中,49%(n = 49)仅来自美国机构,而在接下来的99篇文章中,只有25%(n = 25)仅来自美国机构(p < 0.001)。
COVID-19大流行对骨科手术文献的特征、内容和发表时间产生了重大影响。本文所呈现的数据和观点应有助于简化未来对COVID-19对骨科手术实践、教学和学习的持久影响的正式分析。