Literature DB >> 31242148

Cuban Scientific Production on Diabetes, 2000-2017: Peer-reviewed Publications, Collaboration and Impact.

Ibraín E Corrales-Reyes, Yasmany Fornaris-Cedeño, Alberto J Dorta-Contreras, Christian R Mejia, Josmel Pacheco-Mendoza, Ricardo Arencibia-Jorge.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION The steadily increasing prevalence of diabetes globally has captured researchers' attention. Cuban production of scientific articles on diabetes has not been studied from a bibliometric perspective. OBJECTIVE Characterize the production and impact of research and review articles on diabetes by Cuban authors in journals listed in the Scopus bibliographic database, as well as related collaboration among Cuban institutions and between Cuban and non-Cuban institutions. METHODS A bibliometric analysis was conducted using 2000-2017 data from the Scopus database. The following search strategy was used: descriptor (diabetes), country (Cuba), publication source (journal), article type (original research, review article). Bibliographic indicators of production, visibility, impact and collaboration were examined. RESULTS Cuba contributed 3.2% of Latin American production and 0.1% of global production related to diabetes. Within Cuba's scientific production (610 articles, 538 original research and 72 review), 85.9% had a Cuban corresponding author (Cuban leadership). In articles with international collaboration (22.9%), however, most (67.9%) had non-Cuban corresponding authors. A total of 47% (287) were articles involving a single institution. Only 11.1% were published in top-ranked journals, and 14.4% were cited >10 times. Cubans were lead authors on 0.3% of the most frequently cited (top 10%) articles on diabetes in Scopus. A total of 38.4% of this production appeared in low-impact journals and 57.9% in Cuban journals. Articles published in English accounted for 30% of total and obtained higher impact in terms of citations than articles in Spanish. The strongest networks for scientific collaboration were those that connected Cuban and US researchers. CONCLUSIONS Cuban scientists conduct research on diabetes, but their work is not highly visible in the peer-reviewed literature, particularly in top-ranked journals. The problem is not simply one of publishing more, but of knowing how and where to publish. It is urgent that Cuban universities training health professionals at all levels include instruction on scientific writing.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31242148     DOI: 10.37757/MR2019.V21.N1.5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  MEDICC Rev        ISSN: 1527-3172            Impact factor:   0.583


  2 in total

1.  Mapping the Scientific Landscape of Diabetes Research in Malaysia (2000-2018): A Systematic Scientometrics Study.

Authors:  Kurubaran Ganasegeran; Chee Peng Hor; Mohd Fadzly Amar Jamil; Purnima Devi Suppiah; Juliana Mohd Noor; Norshahida Abdul Hamid; Deik Roy Chuan; Mohd Rizal Abdul Manaf; Alan Swee Hock Ch'ng; Irene Looi
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-01-04       Impact factor: 3.390

2.  Visibility, collaboration and impact of the Cuban scientific output on COVID-19 in Scopus.

Authors:  Ibraín Enrique Corrales-Reyes; Frank Hernández-García; Adrián Alejandro Vitón-Castillo; Christian R Mejia
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2021-10-27
  2 in total

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