Content area

Abstract

Investigators aim to publish their work in top journals in an effort to achieve the greatest possible impact. One measure of impact is the number of times a paper is cited after its publication in a journal. We conducted a review of the highest impact clinical orthopedic journal (Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American volume [J Bone Joint Surg Am]) to determine factors associated with subsequent citations within 3 years of publication.

We conducted citation counts for all original articles published in J Bone Joint Surg Am 2000 (12 issues). We used regression analysis to identify factors associated with citation counts.

We identified 137 original articles in the J Bone Joint Surg Am. There were 749 subsequent citations within 3 years of publication of these articles. Study design was the only variable associated with subsequent citation rate. Meta-analyses, randomized trials and basic science papers received significantly more citations (mean 15.5, 9.3 and 7.6, respectively) than did observational studies (mean retrospective 5.3, prospective 4.2) and case reports (mean 1.5) (p = 0.01). These study designs were also significantly more likely to be cited in the general medical literature (p = 0.02).

Our results suggest that basic science articles and clinical articles with greater methodological safeguards against bias (randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses) are cited more frequently than are clinical studies with less rigorous study designs (observational studies and case reports).

Details

Title
Factors associated with citation rates in the orthopedic literature
Publication title
Volume
50
Issue
2
Pages
119-23
Number of pages
5
Publication year
2007
Publication date
Apr 2007
Section
Original Article: Article original
Publisher
CMA Impact, Inc.
Place of publication
Ottawa
Country of publication
Canada
Publication subject
ISSN
0008428X
e-ISSN
14882310
CODEN
CJSUAX
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
Document type
Journal Article
Document feature
Tables; Graphs; References
Accession number
17550715
ProQuest document ID
195952069
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/factors-associated-with-citation-rates-orthopedic/docview/195952069/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
Copyright Canadian Medical Association Apr 2007
Last updated
2023-11-21
Database
ProQuest One Academic