| Literature DB >> 29490665 |
Bruna de Paula Fonseca E Fonseca1, Priscila Costa Albuquerque2, Ed Noyons3, Fabio Zicker2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: South-south collaboration on health and development research is a critical mechanism for social and economic progress. It allows sharing and replicating experiences to find a "southern solution" to meet shared health challenges, such as access to adequate HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment. This study aimed to generate evidence on the dynamics of south-south collaboration in HIV/AIDS research, which could ultimately inform stakeholders on the progress and nature of collaboration towards increased research capacities in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC).Entities:
Keywords: Co-authorship; HIV; Low- and middle-income countries; Scientific collaboration; South-south collaboration
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29490665 PMCID: PMC5831226 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-018-0341-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Fig. 1Sampling and selection of papers
Description of the categories used in the analysis
| Category | Description | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Health systems research | Examination of healthcare practices, health service delivery (access, barriers and quality) and the structure of healthcare systems; |
| 2 | Health policy and strategies | Research on processes used in the implementation of public health initiatives (policies, programs and practices) as well as the contextual factors that affect these processes |
| 3 | Clinical research | Clinical and laboratory-based studies conducted in human subjects/samples, including evaluation of treatment regimens intended for human use |
| 4 | Basic biomedical research | Laboratory-based research; studies of genes and gene products, molecular, cellular and physiological structures and functions, biological pathways and processes including immune function, bioinformatics, development and characterization of mathematical models |
| 5 | Population-based research | Studies of disease surveillance and distribution that track incidence, prevalence, morbidity, co-morbidity and mortality including ongoing monitoring of large scale cohorts, social determinants of health, factors relating to physical environment associated with the cause, risk or development of disease |
| 6 | Social sciences research | Research that explores beliefs, attitudes and behavioral perspectives, including interpersonal relations, sexual behavior, risk perceptions, knowledge of the disease |
| 7 | Product development & new technologies | Discovery, development and testing of new drugs, vaccines and biopharmaceuticals; testing and evaluation of markers, technologies, devices and kits for diagnosis, prediction, prognosis and monitoring in clinical, community or special settings |
Fig. 2Web of Science indexing rate of scientific publications on HIV/AIDS prevention and/or treatment involving authors from LMIC and HIC (2006–2015). The indexing rate was estimated by the number of indexed papers in each year, relative to the number of HIV/AIDS prevention and/or treatment papers indexed in the database in 2006
Top ten most active LMIC in HIV/AIDS prevention and/or treatment research according to first authors’ country of professional affiliation (2006–2015)
| Rank | Country | Number of publications |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | South Africa | 3714 |
| 2 | China | 2846 |
| 3 | Brazil | 2310 |
| 4 | India | 1869 |
| 5 | Thailand | 825 |
| 6 | Uganda | 674 |
| 7 | Nigeria | 503 |
| 8 | Kenya | 373 |
| 9 | Mexico | 338 |
| 10 | Argentina | 300 |
Fig. 3Co-authorship map between HIC and LMIC-based researchers’ in HIV/AIDS prevention and/or treatment research. Country links were mapped based on authors’ affiliations. Each node represents one country and two countries were considered connected if their researchers shared the authorship of a paper. Only relationships between first author and their co-authors are shown. Links are color-coded according to the continent of the first author: North America – red; Africa – green; Europe – orange; South America – yellow; Asia – blue; Oceania – gray
Fig. 4Thematic map of HIV prevention and/or treatment articles authored by low- and middle-income scientists. The map shows 5982 unique terms obtained from titles and abstracts of publications on HIV prevention and/or treatment involving at least one LMIC-based author. The closer two terms are positioned to each other, the stronger their relation. Each term is represented by a circle, where its diameter and label size is proportional to the number of publications that have the corresponding term in their title or abstract. a Colors indicate clusters of terms that have co-occurred more frequently in the dataset. b and c Colors indicate the occurrence of a term in publications co-authored by HIC and LMIC-based scientists (b) or in publications involving LMIC authors only (c) relative to the whole dataset. Blue represents a low occurrence, green an average occurrence, and red a high occurrence (for the corresponding VOSviewer file see Additional File 2)
Fig. 5Types of collaborative research (%) published by LMIC-based authors exclusively
Fig. 6Funders of LMIC collaboration according to the type of research. Bubble sizes are proportional to the number of papers funded of each type