Literature DB >> 15360823

Evolution of medical informatics in bibliographic databases.

Paula Otero1, Federico Pedernera, Sergio Montenegro, Damian Borbolla, Sebastián Garcia Marti, Daniel Luna, Fernan Gonzalez Bernaldo de Quiros.   

Abstract

Medical informatics became a medical specialty during the last years and this is evidenced by a great amount of journal articles regarding the subject published worldwide. We compared the presentation of Medical Informatics in two different bibliographic databases: MEDLINE and LILACS (Latin American and Caribbean Literature on the Health Sciences). Previous studies described how Medical Informatics was represented in MEDLINE, but we wanted to compare it to a regional database as LILACS. We search both databases completely (MEDLINE 1966 -2002 and LILACS 1982-2002) using the keyword "Medical Informatics" as MeSH term in MEDLINE and as DeCS term in LILACS, and we added "medical informatics" as text word and analyzed the references obtained as results. We found that MEDLINE properly represents the impact of Medical Informatics in non-Latin-American international journals, but lacks of a considerable amount of articles from this region, while LILACS, although in comparison it is smaller in size, has more articles regarding the subject. So we think that LILACS properly represents the specialty in Latin America and the Caribbean Region.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15360823

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stud Health Technol Inform        ISSN: 0926-9630


  3 in total

1.  The Top 100 Articles in the Medical Informatics: a Bibliometric Analysis.

Authors:  Hamed Nadri; Bahlol Rahimi; Toomas Timpka; Shahram Sedghi
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2017-08-19       Impact factor: 4.460

2.  Publication trends in the medical informatics literature: 20 years of "Medical Informatics" in MeSH.

Authors:  Jonathan P Deshazo; Donna L Lavallie; Fredric M Wolf
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2009-01-21       Impact factor: 2.796

3.  Two h-index benchmarks for evaluating the publication performance of medical informatics researchers.

Authors:  Khaled El Emam; Luk Arbuckle; Elizabeth Jonker; Kevin Anderson
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2012-10-18       Impact factor: 5.428

  3 in total

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