Global Cardiovascular Research Output, Citations, and Collaborations: A Time-Trend, Bibliometric Analysis (1999–2008)

Introduction Health research is one mechanism to improve population-level health and should generally match the health needs of populations. However, there have been limited data to assess the trends in national-level cardiovascular research output, even as cardiovascular disease [CVD] has become the leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Materials and Methods We performed a time trends analysis of cardiovascular research publications (1999–2008) downloaded from Web of Knowledge using a iteratively-tested cardiovascular bibliometric filter with >90% precision and recall. We evaluated cardiovascular research publications, five-year running actual citation indices [ACIs], and degree of international collaboration measured through the ratio of the fractional count of addresses from one country against all addresses for each publication. Results and Discussion Global cardiovascular publication volume increased from 40 661 publications in 1999 to 55 284 publications in 2008, which represents a 36% increase. The proportion of cardiovascular publications from high-income, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development [OECD] countries declined from 93% to 84% of the total share over the study period. High-income, OECD countries generally had higher fractional counts, which suggest less international collaboration, than lower income countries from 1999–2008. There was an inverse relationship between cardiovascular publications and age-standardized CVD morbidity and mortality rates, but a direct, curvilinear relationship between cardiovascular publications and Human Development Index from 1999–2008. Conclusions Cardiovascular health research output has increased substantially in the past decade, with a greater share of citations being published from low- and middle-income countries. However, low- and middle-income countries with the higher burdens of cardiovascular disease continue to have lower research output than high-income countries, and thus require targeted research investments to improve cardiovascular health.

[1]  Colin W. Binns,et al.  Health Research-Essential Link to Equity in Development , 1990 .

[2]  W. Schaper,et al.  The international rank order of clinical cardiology. , 1996, European heart journal.

[3]  Grant Lewison,et al.  The definition of biomedical research subfields with title keywords and application to the analysis of research outputs , 1996 .

[4]  R. Wears,et al.  Journal prestige, publication bias, and other characteristics associated with citation of published studies in peer-reviewed journals. , 2002, JAMA.

[5]  D. Yach,et al.  Research gap in cardiovascular disease in developing countries , 2003, The Lancet.

[6]  Aileen Clarke,et al.  A bibliometric overview of public health research in Europe. , 2007, European journal of public health.

[7]  A. Kulkarni,et al.  Characteristics Associated with Citation Rate of the Medical Literature , 2007, PloS one.

[8]  V. Ajay,et al.  Global cardiovascular disease research survey. , 2007, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

[9]  Isaac CH Fung,et al.  Does language matter? A case study of epidemiological and public health journals, databases and professional education in French, German and Italian , 2008, Emerging themes in epidemiology.

[10]  Ricardo Arencibia-Jorge,et al.  Comparison of SCImago journal rank indicator with journal impact factor , 2008, FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.

[11]  Marie E. McVeigh,et al.  The journal impact factor denominator: defining citable (counted) items. , 2009, JAMA.

[12]  G. Lewison,et al.  Understanding the impact of public policy on cancer research: a bibliometric approach. , 2010, European journal of cancer.

[13]  V. Durieux,et al.  Bibliometric indicators: quality measurements of scientific publication. , 2010, Radiology.

[14]  Peder Olesen Larsen,et al.  The rate of growth in scientific publication and the decline in coverage provided by Science Citation Index , 2010, Scientometrics.

[15]  Grant Lewison,et al.  Definition of Cancer Research: Journals, Titles, Abstracts or Keywords? , 2011 .

[16]  M. Mckee,et al.  Where There Is No Health Research: What Can Be Done to Fill the Global Gaps in Health Research? , 2012, PLoS medicine.

[17]  E. Veitch,et al.  The World Health Report 2012 That Wasn't , 2012, PLoS medicine.

[18]  Santo Fortunato,et al.  World citation and collaboration networks: uncovering the role of geography in science , 2012, Scientific Reports.

[19]  T. Nakayama,et al.  Academic Impact of Qualitative Studies in Healthcare: Bibliometric Analysis , 2013, PloS one.

[20]  D. Malta,et al.  Country actions to meet UN commitments on non-communicable diseases: a stepwise approach , 2013, The Lancet.