Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán, Mexico City, Mexico.
Hospital Regional de Alta Especialidad de Oaxaca, Mexico City, Mexico.
JCO Glob Oncol. 2022 Mar;8:e2100299. doi: 10.1200/GO.21.00299.
Global Oncology is the movement to improve equitable access to cancer control and care, recognizing challenges because of economic and social factors between high-, middle-, and low-income countries (HIC, MIC, and LIC, respectively). The () is a major platform dedicated to publishing peer-reviewed research relevant to populations with limited resources. To assess the success of its goals of encouraging global interaction and increasing MIC and LIC engagement, we analyzed authorship and readership patterns.
Metadata of logged views between January 1, 2018, and June 30, 2019, of articles published in 2018 by were identified using Google Analytics. The country of origin of each author and those who accessed the journal were categorized according to the 2019 income group World Bank Classification (WBC).
One hundred thirty-two articles were published in in 2018. Corresponding authors came from 34 nations: 35% HIC, 47% MIC, and 18% LIC. The top publishing countries were the United States, India, Brazil, Mexico, and Nigeria. Article authors were solely from within one WBC group in 41% (23% HIC, 16% MIC, and 2% LIC). In those with mixed-WBC authorship origins, collaborations were 42% HIC + MIC, 11% HIC + LIC, and 6% HIC + MIC + LIC, but none with MIC + LIC. Regarding viewing, 87,860 views originated from 180 countries (82% of the WBC list): 35% HIC, 51% MIC, and 14% LIC. The most common accessing nations were the United States, India, the United Kingdom, Brazil, and Ethiopia.
More than half of 's authorship comes from mixed WBC groups, with viewership extending to most of the world's nations. Areas to address are low level of LIC corresponding authors, few papers from authors across all WBC groups, no publications from MIC + LIC collaborations, and a low percentage of readership by LIC. These data provide focus to target interventions aimed at reducing the academic segregation of LIC and improving interactions across all WBC countries.
全球肿瘤学是改善癌症控制和护理公平获取的运动,认识到高收入国家(HIC)、中等收入国家(MIC)和低收入国家(LIC)之间因经济和社会因素而面临的挑战。该杂志是一个主要平台,专门发表与资源有限的人群相关的同行评审研究。为了评估其鼓励全球互动和增加 MIC 和 LIC 参与度的目标的成功,我们分析了作者和读者的模式。
使用 Google Analytics 识别 2018 年发表的 2018 年文章的登录视图元数据。根据 2019 年世界银行分类(WBC),将每位作者和访问期刊的作者的原籍国分为国家。
2018 年在该杂志上发表了 132 篇文章。相应的作者来自 34 个国家:35%的 HIC、47%的 MIC 和 18%的 LIC。顶级出版国家是美国、印度、巴西、墨西哥和尼日利亚。文章作者仅来自一个 WBC 组的占 41%(23%的 HIC、16%的 MIC 和 2%的 LIC)。在那些具有混合 WBC 作者来源的文章中,合作分别是 42%的 HIC+MIC、11%的 HIC+LIC 和 6%的 HIC+MIC+LIC,但没有 MIC+LIC。关于浏览量,有 87860 次来自 180 个国家(WBC 名单的 82%):35%的 HIC、51%的 MIC 和 14%的 LIC。最常见的访问国家是美国、印度、英国、巴西和埃塞俄比亚。
该杂志的作者有一半以上来自混合 WBC 群体,其读者群延伸到世界上大多数国家。需要解决的领域是 LIC 相应作者的水平较低、来自所有 WBC 群体的论文较少、MIC+LIC 合作没有出版物以及 LIC 的阅读率较低。这些数据为针对旨在减少 LIC 的学术隔离并改善所有 WBC 国家之间互动的干预措施提供了重点。