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- Edward I Ham, Daniela A Perez-Chadid, Zhe Wang, Hodan Abdi, Nathan A Shlobin, Ahmed Negida, Ernest J Barthélemy, Nqobile Thango, Kee B Park, and Ignatius N Esene.
- Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. Electronic address: edward.ham@stonybrookmedicine.edu.
- World Neurosurg. 2023 Jun 20.
BackgroundResearch is pivotal to neurosurgical training and practice. The objectives of this study were to quantify neurosurgical research output by authors from low-income countries (LICs), using author affiliation as a proxy, and to understand the patterns of collaboration between LIC authors and their international partners.MethodsPubMed, CINAHL, and EMBASE were searched for neurosurgical literature published by authors from the 27 World Bank LICs from 2010 to 2020. These articles were screened for relevance. Information about publication type, study design, and author demographics was then extracted from included articles. Scopus was subsequently used to determine the H-indices of the authors.ResultsThe rate at which LIC authors have been publishing neurosurgical research has increased significantly from 2010 to 2020. Overall, 19 of the 27 LICs were represented. The LICs with the most research output includes Uganda, Ethiopia, and Rwanda. When LIC authors collaborated with authors from middle-or-high-income countries, these LIC researchers were solely listed in a middle authorship position more than 70% of the time. On average, the H-index of LIC authors was 4.9, compared with average H-indices of 8.7 and 16.8 for their MIC and HIC collaborators, respectively.ConclusionsThe positioning of LIC researchers as middle author contributors revealed significant authorship disparities in international neurosurgical research collaborations. The average H-indices of authors from middle-or-high-income countries were more than 3 times greater than those of LIC authors. Quantifying this issue allows neurosurgical organizations to understand the current landscape and to set concrete goals for research capacity building in LICs.Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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