| Literature DB >> 34948715 |
Jianhong Luo1, Minjuan Chai1, Xuwei Pan1.
Abstract
Novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has had a great impact on global production and life in the past period. Countless researchers devoted themselves to rescuing patients and reducing its impact. Analyzing the literature published during the pandemic and identifying the research priorities is of great significance to quickly discover research gaps, rationally allocate scientific research resources, and promote the development of the global research platform. To understand the swing of research priorities during the pandemic, this paper proposed a research priorities identification framework for pandemic based on scientific literature text analysis. Moreover, a research priority metric model was proposed to measure the characteristics of research priorities, and the empirical analysis from COVID-19 scientific literature was conducted to identify the research priorities during the pandemic. As a result, the research priorities identified by the method proposed in this paper discovered the fine-grained dynamic characteristics along with the process in the pandemic outbreak, and based on this, the emergency scientific research response strategies were discussed to give implications for the public health emergency scientific research and management.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; pandemic; public health emergency management; research priority; text analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34948715 PMCID: PMC8701081 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182413105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Research priorities identification framework based on scientific literature text analysis.
Figure 2Research priorities metric model.
Figure 3Divergence and stability for different number of topics.
Research overall hotspots.
| ROH Id | ROH Label | Keywords |
|---|---|---|
| T0 | Clinical treatment | patient, hospital, group, clinical, admission |
| T1 | Coronavirus | SARS-CoV-2, virus, rna, human, viral |
| T2 | Nursing and health care | care, pandemic, healthcare, health, cancer |
| T3 | Epidemic prevention and control | case, China, epidemic, 2020, number |
| T4 | Risk factors | ci, risk, study, mortality, analysis |
| T5 | Diagnosis and testing | ct, chest, rt-pcr, imaging, pneumonia |
| T6 | Drugs and vaccines | drug, treatment, trial, clinical, antiviral |
| T7 | Social psychology | health, mental, social, anxiety, psychological |
| T8 | Infection process | ace2, angiotensin, cell, receptor, expression |
| T9 | Clinical characteristic | respiratory, severe, acute, syndrome, coronavirus |
Figure 4Research effort coverage.
Figure 5Research response rate. (a) The fluctuating type; (b) the emergency type; (c) the persistent type.
Figure 6Research priorities identification for COVID-19 pandemic. “+”, “−” and “o” in the figure indicate increasing trend, decreasing trend and no change trend respectively, ** means significant at the 5% level.
Comparative analysis of research priorities during the COVID-19 pandemic.
| ROH Id | ROH Label | Research Priorities in the RPM Model | Research topics in Global Research Roadmap (GRR) | Expected Month for Com-pletion in GRR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T3 | Epidemic prevention and control | Emergency (E-1) | Social sciences in the outbreak response | February-20 |
| T8 | Infection process | Emergency (E-1) | ||
| T6 | Drugs and vaccines | Emergency (E-2) | Epidemiological studies | March-20 |
| T1 | Coronavirus | Emergency (E-2) | ||
| T0 | Clinical treatment | Fluctuating (F-3) | Clinical characterization and management | |
| T4 | Risk factors | Fluctuating (F-3) | ||
| T9 | Clinical characteristic | Emergency (E-2) | Candidate therapeutics R&D | April-20 |
| Candidate vaccines R&D | ||||
| T5 | Diagnosis and testing | Persistent (P-2) | Virus natural history, transmission and diagnostics | June-20 |
| T7 | Social psychology | Persistent (P-3) | Animal and environmental research | July-20 |
| T2 | Nursing and health care | Persistent (P-3) | Infection prevention and control, including health care workers’ protection | August-20 |
| Ethics considerations for research |