KMID : 1207720110030030225
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Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery 2011 Volume.3 No. 3 p.225 ~ p.229
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Characteristics and Trends of Orthopedic Publications between 2000 and 2009
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Lee Kyoung-Min
Ryu Mi-Sun Chung Chin-Youb Choi In-Ho Kwon Dae-Gyu Kim Tae-Won Sung Ki-Hyuk Seo Sang-Gyo Park Moon-Seok
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Abstract
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Background: This study was undertaken to investigate the trends of orthopedic publications during the last decade, and to document the country of origin, journal, funding source, and language of contribution using PubMed.
Methods: Orthopedic articles published between 2000 and 2009 were retrieved from PubMed using the following search terms: "orthopaedic[Affiliation] AND ("2000/1/1"[PDAT]: "2009/12/31"[PDAT])" and "orthopedic[Affiliation] AND ("2000/1/1"[PDAT]: "2009/12/31"[PDAT])." The articles were downloaded in XML file format, which contained the following information: article title, author names, journal names, publication dates, article types, languages, authors¡¯ affiliations and funding sources. These information was extracted, sorted, and rearranged using the database¡¯s management software. We investigated the annual number of published orthopedic articles worldwide and the annual rate of increase. Furthermore, the country of publication origin, journal, funding source, and language of contribution were also investigated.
Results: A total of 46,322 orthopedic articles were published and registered in PubMed in the last 10 years. The worldwide number of published orthopedic articles increased from 2,889 in 2000 to 6,909 in 2009, showing an annual increase of 384.6 articles, or an annualized compound rate of 10.2%. The United States ranked highest in the number of published orthopedic articles, followed by Japan, the United Kingdom, Germany, and the Republic of Korea. Among the orthopedic articles published worldwide during the last 10 years, 37.9% pertained studies performed in the United States. Fifty-seven point three percent (57.3%) of articles were published in journals established in the United States. Among the published orthopaedic articles, 4,747 articles (10.2%) disclosed financial support by research funds, of which 4,688 (98.8%) articles utilized research funds from the United States. Most articles were published in English (97.2%, 45,030 articles).
Conclusions: The number of published orthopedic articles has been increasing over the last decade. The number of orthopedic articles, journals publication, and funding sources were dominated by research conducted in the United States, while share and growth of Asian countries including Japan, the Republic of Korea, and China were notable.
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KEYWORD
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Bibliometrics, Orthopedics, Research trend, Periodicals as topics
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FullTexts / Linksout information
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Listed journal information
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