Cross-Sectional Analysis of Patient-Centered Language Use in Journals Publishing Research Focused on Heart Failure.

IF 1.6 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews Pub Date : 2021-07-19 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.17294/2330-0698.1821
Vivian Pham, Benjamin Greiner, Ryan Ottwell, Matt Vassar, Micah Hartwell
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Purpose: Detrimental effects of using non-patient-centered language (nPCL) have been reported for diabetes, mental illness, and obesity, and both the American Medical Association (AMA) and International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) recommend using patient-centered language in medical literature. Heart failure is a common yet stigmatized disease, and nPCL may further propagate stigma. This study analyzed current use of nPCL in journals focused on heart failure research and also examined whether the journals steer authors to adhere to AMA or ICMJE guidelines regarding nPCL.

Methods: Following systematic search of PubMed for heart failure-related articles published from May 1, 2018, to April 30, 2020, cross-sectional analysis was performed. Each selected article was inspected for an array of nPCL terms and frequency of nPCL usage. Chi-squared tests and multivariable logistic regressions were used to assess relationships between study characteristics and nPCL use.

Results: Of the 195 articles fully analyzed, 108 (55.4%) contained a nPCL term, the most frequently used being "heart failure patient" (78.7%), "burden" (23.1%), and "suffer" (15.7%). Use of nPCL was disproportionately more common in original research articles (63.5%) and less common in case reports (18.2%). Articles that did not detail any treatment or intervention used the most nPCL (71.1%). No statistically significant association was found between a journal's impact factor and its adherence to AMA or ICMJE recommendations.

Conclusions: nPCL is widely used in publications reporting on heart failure. We encourage authors and journals to reduce nPCL to help decrease the stigma patients with this disease often encounter.

心衰期刊发表研究中以患者为中心的语言使用横断面分析
目的:使用非以患者为中心的语言(nPCL)对糖尿病、精神疾病和肥胖的有害影响已被报道,美国医学协会(AMA)和国际医学杂志编辑委员会(ICMJE)都建议在医学文献中使用以患者为中心的语言。心力衰竭是一种常见但被污名化的疾病,而nPCL可能进一步传播污名化。本研究分析了目前nPCL在心力衰竭研究期刊上的使用情况,并检查了这些期刊是否引导作者遵守AMA或ICMJE关于nPCL的指南。方法:系统检索PubMed 2018年5月1日至2020年4月30日发表的心力衰竭相关文章,进行横断面分析。每个选定的文章都检查了一系列nPCL术语和nPCL使用频率。采用卡方检验和多变量logistic回归来评估研究特征与nPCL使用之间的关系。结果:在195篇文献中,108篇(55.4%)包含nPCL术语,使用频率最高的是“心力衰竭患者”(78.7%)、“负担”(23.1%)和“受苦”(15.7%)。nPCL在原创研究文章中的使用比例更高(63.5%),在病例报告中的使用比例更低(18.2%)。没有详细说明任何治疗或干预措施的文章使用了最多的nPCL(71.1%)。期刊的影响因子与其对AMA或ICMJE建议的依从性之间没有统计学上的显著关联。结论:nPCL在心力衰竭的报道中被广泛使用。我们鼓励作者和期刊减少nPCL,以帮助减少患有这种疾病的患者经常遇到的耻辱。
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
Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews
Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
自引率
5.90%
发文量
35
审稿时长
20 weeks
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