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Making sense of the infodemic – A bibliometric analysis of publications on COVID-19 in trauma and orthopedics

The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted an explosion of publications to report, understand, further research, and manage this condition. While publications are analyzing the bibliometrics on this condition, there are none available specifically for the impact of COVID-19 on trauma and orthopedics. The ai...

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Autores principales: Kambhampati, Srinivas B. S., Vaishya, Raju, Paleti, Sravya Teja, Khanduja, Vikas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Scientific Scholar 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8219004/
http://dx.doi.org/10.25259/IJMS_206_2020
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author Kambhampati, Srinivas B. S.
Vaishya, Raju
Paleti, Sravya Teja
Khanduja, Vikas
author_facet Kambhampati, Srinivas B. S.
Vaishya, Raju
Paleti, Sravya Teja
Khanduja, Vikas
author_sort Kambhampati, Srinivas B. S.
collection PubMed
description The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted an explosion of publications to report, understand, further research, and manage this condition. While publications are analyzing the bibliometrics on this condition, there are none available specifically for the impact of COVID-19 on trauma and orthopedics. The aim of this study, therefore, was to perform a bibliometric analysis on COVID-19 and trauma and orthopedics to assess its impact on the specialty. A search for articles on COVID-19 concerning trauma and orthopedics, with the keywords: “COVID-19, New coronavirus, SARS-Cov-2, Orthopedic*, trauma, bone, and joint” were performed on the June 19, 2020, using SCOPUS and PUBMED and this resulted in 272 and 887 articles, respectively. Later, on the same day, we searched for orthopedic journals exclusively and extracted 258 articles from 58 journals. Furthermore, we analyzed the Altmetric data through the dimensions website to find the most popular articles on social media on this topic. After analyzing the data, we found that review articles were the most commonly published articles. The leading journal publishing this content were; The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery (JBJS) American (35), followed by the Journal of Arthroplasty (22). There were 6936 authors involved in publishing 887 articles in 2020. Most articles were published by Vaishya (5) followed by Liang (5), and Iyengar (5). Analysis of Altmetric data showed a total number of citations of 5000 with a mean of 1.98. MedRxiv with 781 publications and 1616 citations was the preprint server with the most publications on dimensions. We studied details of the article with maximum AAS score of 25226 is with 840 citations. We have listed useful protocols from the search and top five cited articles from each search strategy. Publications on COVID-19 commenced from the 9(th) week of this year and have increased exponentially. Review articles (PubMed) and articles (Scopus) were the most published. The JBJS (Am) and J Arthroplasty have published the maximum number of articles on COVID-19. We found that for a fast evolving condition and for the short term, altmetrics may be better indicators than citations to follow directions of research. Publications with a low number of citations could have immense social media attention. This study should help in quantifying the value of research and publications related to orthopedics and trauma aspects of COVID-19 and therefore help the readers, researchers, and health-care providers to use this information effectively.
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spelling pubmed-82190042021-06-24 Making sense of the infodemic – A bibliometric analysis of publications on COVID-19 in trauma and orthopedics Kambhampati, Srinivas B. S. Vaishya, Raju Paleti, Sravya Teja Khanduja, Vikas Indian J Med Sci Review Article The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted an explosion of publications to report, understand, further research, and manage this condition. While publications are analyzing the bibliometrics on this condition, there are none available specifically for the impact of COVID-19 on trauma and orthopedics. The aim of this study, therefore, was to perform a bibliometric analysis on COVID-19 and trauma and orthopedics to assess its impact on the specialty. A search for articles on COVID-19 concerning trauma and orthopedics, with the keywords: “COVID-19, New coronavirus, SARS-Cov-2, Orthopedic*, trauma, bone, and joint” were performed on the June 19, 2020, using SCOPUS and PUBMED and this resulted in 272 and 887 articles, respectively. Later, on the same day, we searched for orthopedic journals exclusively and extracted 258 articles from 58 journals. Furthermore, we analyzed the Altmetric data through the dimensions website to find the most popular articles on social media on this topic. After analyzing the data, we found that review articles were the most commonly published articles. The leading journal publishing this content were; The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery (JBJS) American (35), followed by the Journal of Arthroplasty (22). There were 6936 authors involved in publishing 887 articles in 2020. Most articles were published by Vaishya (5) followed by Liang (5), and Iyengar (5). Analysis of Altmetric data showed a total number of citations of 5000 with a mean of 1.98. MedRxiv with 781 publications and 1616 citations was the preprint server with the most publications on dimensions. We studied details of the article with maximum AAS score of 25226 is with 840 citations. We have listed useful protocols from the search and top five cited articles from each search strategy. Publications on COVID-19 commenced from the 9(th) week of this year and have increased exponentially. Review articles (PubMed) and articles (Scopus) were the most published. The JBJS (Am) and J Arthroplasty have published the maximum number of articles on COVID-19. We found that for a fast evolving condition and for the short term, altmetrics may be better indicators than citations to follow directions of research. Publications with a low number of citations could have immense social media attention. This study should help in quantifying the value of research and publications related to orthopedics and trauma aspects of COVID-19 and therefore help the readers, researchers, and health-care providers to use this information effectively. Scientific Scholar 2020-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC8219004/ http://dx.doi.org/10.25259/IJMS_206_2020 Text en © 2020 Published by Scientific Scholar on behalf of Indian Journal of Medical Sciences https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.
spellingShingle Review Article
Kambhampati, Srinivas B. S.
Vaishya, Raju
Paleti, Sravya Teja
Khanduja, Vikas
Making sense of the infodemic – A bibliometric analysis of publications on COVID-19 in trauma and orthopedics
title Making sense of the infodemic – A bibliometric analysis of publications on COVID-19 in trauma and orthopedics
title_full Making sense of the infodemic – A bibliometric analysis of publications on COVID-19 in trauma and orthopedics
title_fullStr Making sense of the infodemic – A bibliometric analysis of publications on COVID-19 in trauma and orthopedics
title_full_unstemmed Making sense of the infodemic – A bibliometric analysis of publications on COVID-19 in trauma and orthopedics
title_short Making sense of the infodemic – A bibliometric analysis of publications on COVID-19 in trauma and orthopedics
title_sort making sense of the infodemic – a bibliometric analysis of publications on covid-19 in trauma and orthopedics
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8219004/
http://dx.doi.org/10.25259/IJMS_206_2020
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