A Bibliometric Study of the scientific publications on patient-reported outcomes in Rheumatology

Abstract Introduction We have conducted a bibliometric study of the scientific publications on patient-reported outcomes in the field of rheumatology. Methods SCOPUS was the database used in this bibliometric study1. We performed two searches. The main search involved selecting the documents publish...

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Veröffentlicht in:Seminars in arthritis and rheumatism 2017-06, Vol.46 (6), p.828-833
Hauptverfasser: Redondo, Marta, Leon, Leticia, Povedano, Francisco Javier, Abasolo, Lydia, Perez-Nieto, Miguel Angel, López-Muñoz, Francisco
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Introduction We have conducted a bibliometric study of the scientific publications on patient-reported outcomes in the field of rheumatology. Methods SCOPUS was the database used in this bibliometric study1. We performed two searches. The main search involved selecting the documents published between 2000 and 2014 limited to top-tier journals addressing Rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases, using specific descriptors together with the operator and main descriptor “patient-reported outcomes” (PROs), and we performed a secondary search, with the specific descriptors: “pain”, “functional capacity” and “fatigue”. We used bibliometric indicators for articles distribution (Price’s law for the increase of scientific literature, and Bradford’s law for dispersion of papers). We also calculated the participation index of the different countries. Results 983 original articles were published between 2000 and 2014. Our results confirmed the fulfilment of Price’s law (correlation coefficient r = 0.9385 after linear adjustment). The average number of articles per Bradford Zone was 327.6. A total of 30 different journals were published. The type of growth for the descriptors “pain” (r2 = 0.5417 compared to r2 = 0.4839) and “fatigue” (r2 = 06276 compared to r2 = 0.5544) is exponential, while linear for the descriptor “functional capacity” (r2 = 0.6769 compared to r2 = 0.3779). Discussion This study revealed significant linear growth of patient-related outcomes in global terms, as well as upward trends for most of the citation-based bibliometric indices, especially significant from 2010 to 2014. Pain and fatigue have greater growth as PRO concepts.
ISSN:0049-0172
1532-866X
DOI:10.1016/j.semarthrit.2016.12.002