[Bibliometric analysis of International Scientific production on primary care].

Aten Primaria

Departamento de Medicina Clínica, Cátedra de Medicina de Familia, Universidad Miguel Hernández, San Juan, Alicante, España.

Published: November 2012

Objective: To present an international view of the scientific production in the field of primary care in the period 1985-2004.

Design: Retrospective, observational study. Bibliometric analysis.

Location: Medline database. WebSPIRS access through version 4.3. We analysed two periods: 2000-2004 (cross-sectional) and 1985-2004 (developmental). Search based on "MeSH Major" with descriptors: Primary Care or Primary Health Care, Family Practice, Family Physicians, Nurse Practitioners, and Entry Terms associated with these.

Key Measures: We analysed the bibliometric indicators of production, circulation, dispersion, and visibility.

Results: In 2000-2004, published 20911 articles were published, 0.73% of total production. There was a growth rate (1985-2004) of 221%, which was 2.4 times more than average. Transience rate was 83.17%. The English language is predominant (88.81%) over 34 languages, with Spanish being the next (2.6%). Sixteen countries produce 95.67% of the articles. Spain occupies the 7th place. Universities (52%) are the most productive institutions. There are 1074 different journals with the 10 most productive being: Br J Gen Pract, Adv Nurse Pract, Aust Fam Physician, Fam Pract, Fam Med, BMJ, Aten Primary Health Serv J, Can Fam Physician, J Fam Pract. The proportion of trials (5.43%) in PC is similar to other disciplines and has increased by 453% (1985-2004).

Conclusions: The production of Primary care is about 1% of the total scientific output, with a noticeable and higher than average growth over 20 years. The proportion of clinical trials is similar to other disciplines. Although Anglo-Saxon countries and journals are the highest producers, Spain and the journal Aten Primaria is among those highlighted.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aprim.2011.12.002DOI Listing

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