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Reporting of Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses- A Bibliometric Analysis of Research Publications in Palliative Care Journals
Author(s) -
Pravin Kumar
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of biomedical and advance research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2455-0558
pISSN - 2229-3809
DOI - 10.7439/ijbar.v3i6.360
Subject(s) - meta analysis , medline , palliative care , systematic review , bibliometrics , medicine , family medicine , library science , nursing , computer science , political science , law

Aims: This study aimed to perform a bibliometric analysis of systematic reviews and meta-analyses in palliative care journals.

Settings and Design: Systematic review of palliative care journals

Methods and Material: MEDLINE database was searched for journals with name ‘palliative’ in their title and articles published from January 2007- December 2011 were then searched in individual journals using search terms ‘systematic review’ OR ‘meta-analysis’ in Title/Abstract. The reporting rates of all journals were compared. The selected articles were categorized into assessment and treatment. The articles were also grouped under practice, education, research and administration.

Statistical analysis used: Descriptive analysis using frequencies and percentiles was done using SPSS for Windows version 16.0.

Results: The overall reporting rate for systematic reviews and meta-analyses was 1.97% (79/4000). Palliat Med had the highest reporting rate of 7.95% (47/591) followed by BMC Palliat Care at 5.55% (5/90) and J Palliat Care at 2.04% (4/196). See table-1 for respective reporting rates for all palliative care journals. Medical journals had the highest reporting rate of 2.89% (59/2040) followed by multidisciplinary journals at1.33% (19/1419), nursing journals at .21% (1/464) and other (social work) journals at 0% (0/77).

Conclusions: The twelve palliative care journals analyzed in this study published few systematic reviews and meta-analyses at a five-year reporting rate of 1.97%, with Palliat Med having the highest reporting rate. There was equal representation of focus on assessment and treatment, with more articles on practice and lesser number of reviews was found on education, research and administration in palliative care.

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