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The Academic Contribution of Emergency Departments in Taiwan: Data on Scientific Publications, 1992‐2011
Author(s) -
Lee CH,
Chaou CH
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
hong kong journal of emergency medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.145
H-Index - 12
eISSN - 2309-5407
pISSN - 1024-9079
DOI - 10.1177/102490791602300204
Subject(s) - milestone , library science , medicine , scopus , citation , impact factor , medline , geography , political science , cartography , computer science , law
This study aimed to evaluate the academic contribution of emergency departments (EDs) in Taiwan by analysing scientific publications during the past 20 years. Methods This was an observational study. All data were collected from the 2010 Journal Citation Reports (JCR) and the SciVerse Scopus database. Three groups of publications were enrolled: (1) publications from Taiwan EDs in emergency medicine (EM) journals; (2) publications from Taiwan EDs in non‐EM journals; (3) publications from Taiwan who were not affiliated with EDs in EM journals. We collected data regarding the name and category of the journal, the publication year, the publication type, and the number of citations for further analysis. Results A total of 475 publications affiliated with Taiwan EDs appeared in EM journals and 735 appeared in non‐EM journals. A total of 389 publications in EM journals affiliated with departments other than EM. The number of publications showed an increasing trend (all p‐value <0.001). The number of publications from Taiwan EDs in EM and non‐EM journals changed in opposite directions since 2008. Researches from Taiwan EDs were published in 68 categories of journals in addition to EM. Publications in non‐EM journals were more frequently cited than were the publications in EM journals. conclusions During the past 20 years, the academic contribution of EDs in Taiwan has increased substantially. The bidirectional change in publication numbers since 2008 constitutes a milestone in the development of EM in Taiwan, and improvements are evident in the quality, quantity, and breadth of research. (Hong Kong j.emerg.med. 2016;23:28‐34)

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