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European Journal of Pediatrics Dec 1990
Topics: Duplicate Publications as Topic; Pediatrics; Periodicals as Topic; Publishing
PubMed: 2279513
DOI: 10.1007/BF02072041 -
Archives of Disease in Childhood Dec 1990
Topics: Duplicate Publications as Topic; Pediatrics; Periodicals as Topic; Publishing
PubMed: 2270934
DOI: 10.1136/adc.65.12.1289 -
Oncology Nursing Forum May 2019Do you remember the first (or 40th) time you received notification that a manuscript you submitted to a journal was accepted? Did you dance around your office, yell so...
Do you remember the first (or 40th) time you received notification that a manuscript you submitted to a journal was accepted? Did you dance around your office, yell so loudly that the person in the office next door came to check on you, and/or immediately post the news to Facebook and Twitter to ensure that your success would be broadcast to all your friends and relatives? And did you then download the required forms and merrily sign them before scanning or faxing them back to the journal? Like many of you, I have done all of the above.
Topics: Academic Dissertations as Topic; Authorship; Copyright; Duplicate Publications as Topic; Editorial Policies; Oncology Nursing; Periodicals as Topic; Publishing; Software
PubMed: 31007256
DOI: 10.1188/19.ONF.267-268 -
Journal of Ethnopharmacology May 2010
Topics: Duplicate Publications as Topic; Periodicals as Topic; Publishing
PubMed: 20230886
DOI: 10.1016/j.jep.2010.03.002 -
AJR. American Journal of Roentgenology Mar 2010
Topics: Biomedical Research; Culture; Editorial Policies; Peer Review, Research; Periodicals as Topic; Publications; Publishing; Radiology; Scientific Misconduct
PubMed: 20198741
DOI: 10.2214/AJR.10.4352 -
Indian Journal of Medical Ethics 2024Evaluating publication trends in a research area helps assess organised scientific efforts in the particular academic field. This study aims to evaluate and compare... (Comparative Study)
Comparative Study Review
BACKGROUND
Evaluating publication trends in a research area helps assess organised scientific efforts in the particular academic field. This study aims to evaluate and compare trends in medical ethics publications in the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMRO) countries.
METHODS
A scoping review was conducted to identify publication trends of Iranian and EMRO medical ethicists. Databases were searched, including Web of Sciences, Scopus, and PubMed for English language articles, which were published by countries in the World Health Organization EMRO regions. Iranian articles were searched in Persian and English language databases. The search strategy for the bioethics filter created by the Kennedy Institute of Ethics. Duplicate entries, tertiary publications and grey literature were excluded. All retrieved articles were categorised into ten main groups. Citavi software® was used for categorising and extracting articles' information.
RESULTS
A total of 1835 English and Persian articles were obtained. Most (1211, 66%) Iranian publications in medical ethics were in Persian, and the rest (624, 34%) were in English. Most (306, 64.42%) of the published English articles in the EMRO region were authored by Iranian scholars, followed by those from Saudi Arabia (52, 10.95%), Oman (40, 8.42%), Pakistan (28, 5.89%), Lebanon (13, 2.74%), and Egypt (12, 2.53%).
CONCLUSION
The results of this study show that the trend of publication of EMRO countries, especially Iranian publications, is insufficient to respond to national demands in medical ethics. A concept map has been presented to determine research needs in medical ethics. Focusing on national and regional research potentials could synergistically affect medical ethics progress in the EMRO region.
Topics: Iran; Humans; Ethics, Medical; Publishing; Bibliometrics; Mediterranean Region; Middle East; Publications
PubMed: 38755769
DOI: 10.20529/IJME.2024.008 -
JAMA Feb 2023
Topics: Publications; Publishing; Scientific Misconduct; Authorship; Software; Knowledge Bases; Knowledge; Medicine
PubMed: 36719674
DOI: 10.1001/jama.2023.1344 -
Journal of Dental Education Aug 2018
Topics: Editorial Policies; Education, Dental; Publishing; Serial Publications
PubMed: 30068768
DOI: 10.21815/JDE.018.074 -
South African Medical Journal =... Mar 2020The recent amendment to the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA) Form 57 MED allows specialist registration on publication of the compulsory MMed research...
BACKGROUND
The recent amendment to the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA) Form 57 MED allows specialist registration on publication of the compulsory MMed research assignment in an accredited journal. No data exist on the conversion rate of MMed dissertations to publication.
OBJECTIVES
To establish conversion rates of MMed dissertations to accredited publications. Associated variables arising from the publishing exercise were also investigated.
METHODS
A total of 309 MMed dissertations, submitted between 1996 and 2017, were downloaded from the public domain. Each dissertation was recorded as to format, submission year, awarding university and clinical discipline. Electronic searches determined publication outcomes. Journal title, accreditation status, year of publication, registrar position on author ranking and publication type were extracted for each output. Descriptive analysis was undertaken and, where appropriate, Fisher's exact test at p>0.05 was used to establish statistical significance.
RESULTS
A total of 116 dissertations were published at an overall conversion rate of 37.5%, culminating in 136 outputs. Publication-ready dissertations had a significantly higher conversion rate (60.3%) than monographs (30.5%) (p>0.0001). All but 6 of the 80 publishing journals were accredited. SAMJ was the journal of choice for 13% of papers. The registrar was the first author in the majority of publications. In the case of monographs, 66% were published after dissertation submission compared with 50% of publication-ready formats.
CONCLUSIONS
Conversion of the South African MMed dissertation into a journal-accredited scientific article was achieved in 60.3% of publication-ready-format submissions, suggesting that the HPCSA amendment facilitating specialist registration is attainable. Retrospective reviews of dissertations provide valuable insights to improve understanding of the contentious issue of the registrar research requirement that permits specialist registration.
Topics: Academic Dissertations as Topic; Accreditation; Education, Medical; Eligibility Determination; Health Policy; Humans; Periodicals as Topic; Publishing; Retrospective Studies; South Africa; Specialization
PubMed: 32657742
DOI: 10.7196/SAMJ.2020.v110i4.14339 -
Medicina 2023The publication of medical articles has become increasingly complex, linked to multiple factors. It poses difficult problems for both authors and journals themselves....
The publication of medical articles has become increasingly complex, linked to multiple factors. It poses difficult problems for both authors and journals themselves. This Editorial addresses current and controversial issues: peer review, preprints as a new way of disseminating knowledge, the growing number of publications without peer review and its variants, and the risks of predatory publications. The article proposes future guidelines as an editorial policy of MEDICINA. The controversy continues, and surely the passage of time will place our proposal in a changing scientific world like knowledge itself.
Topics: Humans; Publishing; Periodicals as Topic; Peer Review; Medicine
PubMed: 36774603
DOI: No ID Found