Modlin Chelsea E, Deng Qiao, Benkeser David, Mulate Yimtubezinash Woldeamanuel, Aseffa Abraham, Waller Lance, Powell Kimberly R, Kempker Russell R
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2022 Jun 10;2(6):e0000275. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0000275. eCollection 2022.
An increasing amount of infectious diseases research is conducted in low-income countries (LIC) given their high burden of disease; however, the contribution of LIC investigators as measured by authorship metrics, specifically to infectious diseases research, has not been thoroughly studied. We performed a literature search for primary research conducted either within LICs or using samples from LIC participants published between 1998-2017 in the Infectious Disease Society of America-affiliated journals Clinical Infectious Diseases, Journal of Infectious Diseases, and Open Forum Infectious Diseases. Primary outcomes included proportion of LIC-affiliated first and last authors (i.e. lead authors) per year and authorship trends over time. Secondary outcomes included proportion of LIC-affiliated authorship by geographic distribution and disease focus. Among 1308 publications identified, 50% had either a first or last LIC-affiliated author. Among these authors, 48% of LIC-affiliated first authors and 52% of LIC-affiliated last authors also reported a non-LIC institutional affiliation. While the absolute number of articles by LIC-affiliated lead authors increased over the 20-year period, the proportion of articles with LIC-affiliated lead authors decreased. There is a growing literature for infectious disease research conducted in LICs yet authorship trends in a small subset of these publications demonstrate a pronounced and worsening exclusion of LIC-affiliated investigators from publishing as lead authors.
鉴于低收入国家(LIC)疾病负担沉重,越来越多的传染病研究在这些国家开展;然而,以作者身份指标衡量,LIC研究人员对传染病研究的贡献尚未得到充分研究。我们对1998年至2017年间在与美国传染病学会相关的期刊《临床传染病》《传染病杂志》和《开放论坛传染病》上发表的、在LIC内部进行或使用LIC参与者样本的原创研究进行了文献检索。主要结果包括每年LIC附属的第一作者和最后作者(即主要作者)的比例以及作者身份随时间的趋势。次要结果包括按地理分布和疾病重点划分的LIC附属作者身份比例。在1308篇被识别的出版物中,50%有LIC附属的第一作者或最后作者。在这些作者中,48%的LIC附属第一作者和52%的LIC附属最后作者也报告了非LIC机构的隶属关系。虽然在这20年期间,LIC附属主要作者的文章绝对数量有所增加,但LIC附属主要作者的文章比例却有所下降。关于在LIC开展的传染病研究的文献越来越多,但这些出版物中的一小部分的作者身份趋势表明,LIC附属研究人员作为主要作者发表文章的情况明显且日益被排除在外。