Flores Michael J, MacKechnie Madeline C, Brown Kelsey E, O'Marr Jamieson M, Rodarte Patricia, Socci Adrienne, Miclau Theodore
Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Institute for Global Orthopaedics and Traumatology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
JB JS Open Access. 2024 Sep 13;9(3). doi: 10.2106/JBJS.OA.24.00033. eCollection 2024 Jul-Sep.
Orthopaedic academic partnerships between high-income countries (HICs) and low and middle-income countries (LMICs) are an effective method to increase research and scholarly support. The purpose of this study was to perform a systematic literature review of the current state of partnerships worldwide and assess the quality, quantity, and content of their research output.
A systematic review was conducted using 4 academic databases: PubMed, MEDLINE, Embase, and CENTRAL. Article eligibility criteria included articles published between January 2017 and 2022, with orthopaedic authors from at least 1 HIC and LMIC. Articles related to global orthopaedic surgery with exclusively HIC or LMIC authors were excluded.
The database search yielded 25,928 articles, and after deduplication, 21,145 articles were included in the screening. After title and abstract screening, 408 articles underwent full-text review for eligibility. The final list of eligible articles for extraction included 310 publications in 127 journals. Published articles increased over time (46 in 2017 to 88 in 2021) and were most commonly published in the (20, 6.5%). Open-access articles (203, 65.5%) had a significantly greater Journal Citation Indicator (p = 0.024) than non-open-access articles. Most studies (40.7%) were observational, with few (3.6%) randomized controlled trials. Orthopaedic trauma (38.1%) was the most common subspecialty, followed by spine (14.8%) and pediatrics (14.2%). Most partnerships were sponsored by North American authors in 65 LMICs, primarily China, India, and the sub-Saharan African region.
This study identified 310 articles published by orthopaedic international academic partnerships in 106 countries over the past 5 years, demonstrating that collaborations between LMIC/HIC partners nearly doubled over the study period. Sixty-five percent of the articles were published in open-access journals.
高收入国家(HICs)与低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)之间的骨科学术合作是增加研究和学术支持的有效方法。本研究的目的是对全球范围内合作的现状进行系统的文献综述,并评估其研究产出的质量、数量和内容。
使用4个学术数据库进行系统综述:PubMed、MEDLINE、Embase和CENTRAL。文章纳入标准包括2017年1月至2022年期间发表的文章,作者中至少有1位来自高收入国家和低收入和中等收入国家的骨科医生。仅由高收入国家或低收入和中等收入国家作者撰写的与全球骨科手术相关的文章被排除。
数据库检索共得到25928篇文章,去重后,21145篇文章进入筛选阶段。经过标题和摘要筛选,408篇文章进入全文资格审查。最终纳入提取的合格文章列表包括127种期刊上的310篇出版物。发表的文章数量随时间增加(从2017年的46篇增加到2021年的88篇),最常发表在 (20篇,占6.5%)。开放获取文章(203篇,占65.5%)的期刊引用指标显著高于非开放获取文章(p = 0.024)。大多数研究(40.7%)为观察性研究,随机对照试验较少(3.6%)。骨科创伤(38.1%)是最常见的亚专业,其次是脊柱(14.8%)和儿科(14.2%)。大多数合作由北美作者发起,涉及65个低收入和中等收入国家,主要是中国、印度和撒哈拉以南非洲地区。
本研究确定了过去5年中106个国家的骨科国际学术合作发表的310篇文章,表明在研究期间,低收入和中等收入国家/高收入国家合作伙伴之间的合作几乎翻了一番。65%的文章发表在开放获取期刊上。