Literature DB >> 33357085

A decade of Ecuador´s efforts to raise its health research output: a bibliometric analysis.

Ivan Sisa1,2, Andrea Abad2, Isabel Espinosa1,2, Isaac Martinez-Cornejo2, Pablo Burbano-Santos2,3.   

Abstract

Background: Over the past decade, the political movement called 'Revolución Ciudadana' implemented a variety of policies and interventions (P&I) in Ecuador to improve higher education and strengthen local research capacity. We refer specifically to the 'Mandato 14' and the Higher Education Law (LOES, Spanish acronym) launched in 2008 and 2010, respectively. Objective: To assess the impact of these P&I (Mandato 14/LOES) on the production of health sciences-related articles (HSRA), and the relationship of these HSRA with the country's health priorities.
Methods: A Scopus search was performed to retrieve HSRA published from 1999 to 2017. Bivariate analysis was used to assess variation between the period I (1999-2008) and period II (2009-2017). Further, we examined the association between the top 10 causes of mortality and the total HSRA output.
Results: The final study sample consisted of 2784 articles. After 2008, Ecuadorian production of HSRA increased steadily from 671 to 2133 publications (p<.001). Overall (1999-2017), the most common study design was cross-sectional (32.3%), the primary research focus was in the clinical-surgical area (49.3%), and the academic institutions were the primary drivers of scientific production during period II (56.9% vs. 29.5%, p<.001). Further, we found a decrease in the production of randomized controlled trials (6.7% vs. 1.8%, p<.001). Only 9% of research production involved the primary causes of mortality, and the proportion has remained unchanged over time (8.2% vs. 9.3%, p>.05). Conclusions: Ecuadorian HSRA output increased significantly after 2008. This larger volume of scientific output could be the result to the Mandato 14/LOES implemented in the last decade. However, a low percentage of HSRA are dedicated to addressing the country's health priorities. Proper planning, execution and monitoring of national health research agendas would reduce the mismatch between health burden and the HSRA output in Ecuador and other low-and middle-income countries.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Ecuador; National health research system; bibliometric analysis; biomedical research; health research policy; policy analysis

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33357085      PMCID: PMC7782667          DOI: 10.1080/16549716.2020.1855694

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Health Action        ISSN: 1654-9880            Impact factor:   2.640


  23 in total

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2.  Medical education in Ecuador.

Authors:  Carrillo P Joffre; Belgica Delgado; Russell Olive Kosik; Lei Huang; Xudong Zhao; Tung-Ping Su; Shuu-Jiun Wang; Qi Chen; Angela Pei-Chen Fan
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3.  [National health research systems in Latin America: a 14-country review].

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5.  Impact of health research on advances in knowledge, research capacity-building and evidence-informed policies: a case study on maternal mortality and morbidity in Brazil.

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7.  Regression based quasi-experimental approach when randomisation is not an option: interrupted time series analysis.

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Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2015-06-09

8.  Evaluation of the mortality registry in Ecuador (2001-2013) - social and geographical inequalities in completeness and quality.

Authors:  Andrés Peralta; Joan Benach; Carme Borrell; Verónica Espinel-Flores; Lucinda Cash-Gibson; Bernardo L Queiroz; Marc Marí-Dell'Olmo
Journal:  Popul Health Metr       Date:  2019-03-28

9.  A comparison between health research output and burden of disease in Arab countries: evidence from Palestine.

Authors:  Loai Albarqouni; Khamis Elessi; Niveen M E Abu-Rmeileh
Journal:  Health Res Policy Syst       Date:  2018-03-15

10.  Advancing health research through research governance.

Authors:  Luis Alejandro Salicrup; Luis Gabriel Cuervo; Rodolfo Cano Jiménez; Nelly Salgado de Snyder; Francisco Becerra-Posada
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2018-07-16
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