Fate of Pediatric Transport Medicine Abstracts 2011 to 2020: What Predicts Publication Success?

Q3 Nursing
Ranna A. Rozenfeld MD, FAAP, FCCM , Corina Noje MD
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective

Pediatric-neonatal transport research projects are presented at the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Section on Transport Medicine (SOTM) scientific abstract program annually. Journal publication increases the impact of these projects. Our objectives were to determine the publication rate of transport abstracts and to identify factors predictive of publication success.

Methods

We reviewed all AAP SOTM abstracts accepted for presentation from 2011 to 2020 and assessed presentation format (oral/platform vs. poster), authors’ professional degree (physician vs. nonphysician), and first author's trainee status. We searched PubMed, Ovid, and ResearchGate for publications by abstract title and authors and then compared published versus unpublished abstracts. Categorical variables were expressed as proportions and compared using the chi-square test or the Fisher exact test, whereas continuous variables were summarized using medians and interquartile ranges (IQRs) and compared using the Student t-test or the Kruskal-Wallis test as appropriate. A linear probability model was performed.

Results

Of 194 presented abstracts, 67 (34.5%) were published. The publication rate was significantly higher for oral/platform versus poster abstracts (P < .01), if the abstract was an oral/platform (probability increase by 19.5%, P < .01), and if the first author was a trainee (probability increase by 25.6%, p < 0.05). The constant was estimated as 24.9% probability of publication. Hence, if the first author was a physician, a trainee, and had an oral/platform presentation, there was an 85.8% chance of being published. The median (IQR) time to publication was 2 years (IQR: 2-4 years), with articles published the longest having the most citations. Articles were published in 27 different journals, with nearly half (33/67, 49.3%) being published in 3 journals.

Conclusion

AAP SOTM abstracts have a 34.5% publication rate over the past 10 years, which is consistent with other medical specialties. Oral abstracts, physician first authors, and trainee first authors had a significantly higher success rate. Special emphasis should be placed nationally on supporting nonphysician transport professionals to publish their work.

2011年至2020年儿科转运医学摘要的命运:如何预测出版成功?
目标每年在美国儿科学会 (AAP) 运输医学分会 (SOTM) 的科学摘要计划中介绍儿科-新生儿运输研究项目。在期刊上发表论文可以提高这些项目的影响力。我们的目标是确定转运摘要的发表率,并找出预测发表成功的因素。方法我们回顾了 2011 年至 2020 年所有被接受发表的 AAP SOTM 摘要,并评估了发表形式(口头/平台与海报)、作者的专业程度(医生与非医生)以及第一作者的受训者身份。我们按摘要标题和作者在 PubMed、Ovid 和 ResearchGate 上搜索了相关出版物,然后比较了已发表和未发表的摘要。分类变量用比例表示,并使用卡方检验或费雪精确检验进行比较;连续变量用中位数和四分位数间距(IQR)表示,并酌情使用学生 t 检验或 Kruskal-Wallis 检验进行比较。结果 在提交的 194 篇摘要中,有 67 篇(34.5%)发表。口头/平台摘要的发表率明显高于海报摘要(P <.01),如果摘要是口头/平台摘要(概率增加 19.5%,P <.01),如果第一作者是实习生(概率增加 25.6%,P <0.05)。常数估计为 24.9% 的发表概率。因此,如果第一作者是一名医生、一名实习生,并做过口头/平台发言,那么发表的概率为 85.8%。文章发表时间的中位数(IQR)为 2 年(IQR:2-4 年),发表时间最长的文章被引用的次数最多。文章发表在 27 种不同的期刊上,其中近一半(33/67,49.3%)发表在 3 种期刊上。口头摘要、医生第一作者和实习生第一作者的成功率明显更高。应在全国范围内特别重视支持非医师运输专业人员发表论文。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Air Medical Journal
Air Medical Journal Nursing-Emergency Nursing
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
112
审稿时长
69 days
期刊介绍: Air Medical Journal is the official journal of the five leading air medical transport associations in the United States. AMJ is the premier provider of information for the medical transport industry, addressing the unique concerns of medical transport physicians, nurses, pilots, paramedics, emergency medical technicians, communication specialists, and program administrators. The journal contains practical how-to articles, debates on controversial industry issues, legislative updates, case studies, and peer-reviewed original research articles covering all aspects of the medical transport profession.
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