Society of Meta-Research and Biomedical Innovation, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Life Sciences, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
Front Public Health. 2022 May 31;10:811885. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.811885. eCollection 2022.
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), one of the most serious public health crises in over a century, has led to an unprecedented surge of publications across all areas of knowledge. This study assessed the early research productivity on COVID-19 in terms of vaccination, diagnosis, treatment, symptoms, risk factors, nutrition, and economy. The Scopus database was searched between January 1, 2020 and December 31, 2020 to initially examine the research productivity on COVID-19, as measured by total publications by the 20 highest-ranked countries according to gross domestic product. The literature search was then refined, and research productivity was assessed across seven major research domains related to COVID-19: vaccination, diagnosis, treatment, symptoms, risk factors, nutrition, and economy. The initial literature search yielded 53,348 publications. Among these, 27,801 publications involved authorship from a single country and 22,119 publications involved authorship from multiple countries. Overall, the United States was the most productive country ( = 13,491), with one and a half times or more publications than any other country, on COVID-19 and the selected domains related to it. However, following adjustment for population size, gross domestic product, and expenditure for research and development, countries of emerging economies such as India along countries of lower population density such as Switzerland, Indonesia, and Turkey exhibited higher research productivity. The surge of COVID-19 publications in such a short period of time underlines the capacity of the scientific community to respond against a global health emergency; however where future research priorities and resource distribution should be placed on the respective thematic fields at an international level, warrants further investigation.
2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)是一个多世纪以来最严重的公共卫生危机之一,导致所有知识领域的出版物空前激增。本研究评估了 COVID-19 在疫苗接种、诊断、治疗、症状、危险因素、营养和经济方面的早期研究生产力。使用 Scopus 数据库,于 2020 年 1 月 1 日至 12 月 31 日进行了检索,最初检查了按国内生产总值排名前 20 位的国家的总出版物衡量的 COVID-19 研究生产力。然后对文献检索进行了细化,并评估了与 COVID-19 相关的七个主要研究领域的研究生产力:疫苗接种、诊断、治疗、症状、危险因素、营养和经济。最初的文献检索产生了 53348 篇论文。其中,27801 篇论文涉及单一国家的作者,22119 篇论文涉及多个国家的作者。总体而言,美国是最具生产力的国家( = 13491),其在 COVID-19 及其相关选定领域的出版物是其他任何国家的一倍半或更多。然而,在根据人口规模、国内生产总值以及研究与开发支出进行调整后,印度等新兴经济体国家以及瑞士、印度尼西亚和土耳其等人口密度较低的国家的研究生产力更高。在如此短的时间内 COVID-19 出版物的激增,突显了科学界应对全球卫生紧急情况的能力;然而,在国际层面上,应该在各自的主题领域中确定未来的研究重点和资源分配,这需要进一步调查。