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BMC medical education · Jan 2014
Comparative StudyProductivity in medical education research: an examination of countries of origin.
- Asif Doja, Tanya Horsley, and Margaret Sampson.
- BMC Med Educ. 2014 Jan 1; 14: 243.
BackgroundProductivity and countries of origin of publications within the field of medical education research have not been explored. Using bibliometric techniques we conducted an analysis of studies evaluating medical education interventions, examining the country where research originated as well as networks of authors within countries identified as 'most productive'.MethodsPubMed was used to search for evaluative studies of medical education. We then examined relative productivity of countries with >100 publications in our sample (number of publications/number of medical schools in country). Author networks from the top 2 countries with the highest relative productivity were constructed.Results6874 publications from 18,883 different authors were included. The countries with the highest relative publication productivity were Canada (37.1), Netherlands (28.3), New Zealand (27), the UK (23), and the U.S.A (17.1). Author collaboration networks differed in both numbers of authors and intensity of collaborations in the countries with highest relative productivity.ConclusionsIn terms of the number of publications of evaluative studies in medical education, Canada.
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