The geographic diversity of authorship in leading general surgery journals; A study of 24,332 authors
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Date
2023
Authors
Campbell, J.O.
Gupta, A.K.
Lu, A.
Lim, Y.F.
Mishra, N.
Hewitt, J.N.
Ovenden, C.D.
Kovoor, J.G.
Bacchi, S.
Trochsler, M.
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Journal article
Citation
Surgeon, 2023; 21(6):390-396
Statement of Responsibility
Jed O. Campbell, Aashray K. Gupta, Amy Lu, Ye Fang Lim, Neel Mishra, Joseph N. Hewitt, Christopher D. Ovenden, Joshua G. Kovoor, Stephen Bacchi, Markus Trochsler, Adam Wells
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Abstract
Background: Research guides evidence-based general surgery practice, advocacy, policy and resource allocation, but is seemingly lacking representation from those countries with greatest disease burden and mortality. Accordingly, we conducted a geographic study of publications in the most impactful general surgery journals worldwide. Methods: The six general surgery journals with the highest 2020 impact factors were selected. Only journals specific to general surgery were included. For all original articles over the past five years, the affiliated country and city were extracted for the first, second and last author. Number of publications were adjusted per capita, and compared to Human Development Index (HDI) using logistic regression. Results: 8274 original articles were published in the top six ranked general surgery journals over 2016e2020, with 24,332 affiliated authors. Authors were most commonly associated with the US (27.88%), Japan (9.09%) and China (8.46%), or per capita, The Netherlands, Sweden and Singapore. There is a linear association between publishing in a top six journal and HDI of country of affiliation. Just four publications were from medium or low HDI countries over the period. Conclusion: Authorship in leading general surgery journals is predominantly from wealthy, Western countries. Authorship is associated with affiliation with a high HDI country, with few authors from medium or low HDI countries. There is a lack of representation in literature from Africa, Russia, and parts of Southeast Asia, and thus a lack of locally relevant evidence to guide surgical practice in these areas of high disease burden and low life expectancy.
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© 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (Scottish charity number SC005317) and Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).