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Identification of biomedical journals in Spain and Latin America
Author(s) -
Bonfill Xavier,
Osorio Dimelza,
Posso Margarita,
Solà Ivan,
Rada Gabriel,
Torres Ania,
García Dieguez Marcelo,
PiñaPozas Maricela,
DíazGarcía Luisa,
Tristán Mario,
Gandarilla Omar,
RincónValenzuela David A.,
Martí Arturo,
Hidalgo Ricardo,
SimancasRacines Daniel,
López Luis,
Correa Ricardo,
RojasDeArias Antonieta,
Loza César,
Gianneo Óscar,
Pardo Hector
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
health information and libraries journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 38
eISSN - 1471-1842
pISSN - 1471-1834
DOI - 10.1111/hir.12110
Subject(s) - latin americans , library science , impact factor , inclusion (mineral) , identification (biology) , medline , publication , publishing , medicine , family medicine , computer science , political science , psychology , law , social psychology , botany , biology
Objectives Journals in languages other than English that publish original clinical research are often not well covered in the main biomedical databases and therefore often not included in systematic reviews. This study aimed to identify Spanish language biomedical journals from Spain and Latin America and to describe their main features. Methods Journals were identified in electronic databases, publishers' catalogues and local registries. Eligibility was determined by assessing data from these sources or the journals' websites, when available. Findings A total of 2457 journals were initially identified; 1498 met inclusion criteria. Spain (27.3%), Mexico (16.0%), Argentina (15.1%) and Chile (11.9%) had the highest number of journals. Most (85.8%) are currently active; 87.8% have an ISSN . The median and mean length of publication were 22 and 29 years, respectively. A total of 66.0% were indexed in at least one database; 3.0% had an impact factor in 2012. A total of 845 journals had websites (56.4%), of which 700 (82.8%) were searchable and 681 (80.6%) free of charge. Conclusions Most of the identified journals have no impact factor or are not indexed in any of the major databases. The list of identified biomedical journals can be a useful resource when conducting hand searching activities and identifying clinical trials that otherwise would not be retrieved.