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- Matilde Giacomello, Cristina Canova, and Renzo Zanotti.
- Mestre hospital, Venice, Italy. Electronic address: giacomellomatilde@gmail.com.
- Nurs Outlook. 2019 Jul 1; 67 (4): 476-485.
BackgroundThe purpose of the study was to assess Italian nurse academics' scientific activity by exploring their publications in international journals.BackgroundThe scientific production of a discipline's academics is a requisite for the university accreditation process and for employment in academic positions. It can also be used as an indicator of the maturity and importance of a given discipline in a country. Italian nurse academics' scientific production has not been analyzed recently.MethodQuantitative descriptive study on an observation period of 16 years, from 2000 to 2016.MethodsAll Italian full-time academics in the sector of General, Clinical, and Pediatric Nursing Sciences were identified, based on selection criteria. All their publications in indexed international journals were systematically collected between November 2016 and February 2017.FindingsTwenty-five Italian nurse academics were identified, and 450 of their publications met all our inclusion criteria, with a mean of 18 publications per author (range 0-88). There was a steady growth in the number of publications over time. Sixty-five percent of articles were published in nursing journals. Eighty-six percent of the publications were on nursing topics, the most popular being clinical issues (53.8%). Eighty percent of the publications were "applied research articles" and most of them adopted a quantitative approach with a descriptive study design. Hospitals and clinics were the most common settings studied, while patients and caregivers were the participants most often involved. Foreign coauthors contributed to 30% of the articles.DiscussionItalian nursing academics contribute adequately to scientific production in the nursing sector.Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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