Majority of Most-Cited Articles in Top Plastic Surgery Journals Do Not Receive Funding.
Abstract
[BACKGROUND] Plastic surgery faculty, residencies, and institutions are frequently judged on the quantity and quality of their research output. Some of the most impressive individuals in the specialty receive financial support in the form of grants and payments to help with research ideas.
[OBJECTIVES] The authors sought to discern if funding directly correlates to greater impact in the top plastic surgery journals as measured by citations.
[METHODS] Using the Web of Science database, the authors identified the 50 most-cited articles in each of the top plastic surgery journals from January 1975 to August 2020. The articles were scanned for funding sources and categorized as industry, federal, foundational, and institutional, while stratifying by decade.
[RESULTS] Between 16 journals, 13.3% of the most-cited articles received funding, 2.6% of which came from industry, 5.4% from government, 4.4% from foundations, and 0.86% from institutions. The percentage of most-cited articles and the proportion that received funding were both correlated with decade (P = 0.0017 and P = 0.043, respectively). However, only the percentage of articles was found to significantly increase over time (P = 0.0068).
[CONCLUSIONS] Although funding leads to meaningful publications, this study showed that financial support is not required to have an influence in plastic surgery research.
[OBJECTIVES] The authors sought to discern if funding directly correlates to greater impact in the top plastic surgery journals as measured by citations.
[METHODS] Using the Web of Science database, the authors identified the 50 most-cited articles in each of the top plastic surgery journals from January 1975 to August 2020. The articles were scanned for funding sources and categorized as industry, federal, foundational, and institutional, while stratifying by decade.
[RESULTS] Between 16 journals, 13.3% of the most-cited articles received funding, 2.6% of which came from industry, 5.4% from government, 4.4% from foundations, and 0.86% from institutions. The percentage of most-cited articles and the proportion that received funding were both correlated with decade (P = 0.0017 and P = 0.043, respectively). However, only the percentage of articles was found to significantly increase over time (P = 0.0068).
[CONCLUSIONS] Although funding leads to meaningful publications, this study showed that financial support is not required to have an influence in plastic surgery research.
추출된 의학 개체 (NER)
| 유형 | 영어 표현 | 한국어 / 풀이 | UMLS CUI | 출처 | 등장 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 약물 | [BACKGROUND] Plastic surgery faculty
|
scispacy | 1 |
MeSH Terms
Databases, Factual; Humans; Periodicals as Topic; Surgery, Plastic
같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (5)
- How Does Operative Time Affect Outcomes in Breast Reduction Surgery?
- A 5-Year Analysis of the Integrated Plastic Surgery Residency Match: The Most Competitive Specialty?
- Reducing pain and opioid consumption after body contouring of the breast by application of a perioperative nerve block: a systematic review.
- Can Tranexamic Acid Be Safely Administered during Microsurgery in the Era of COVID-19?
- The plastic surgeon as employee: Survey of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.