1982 - 2020年乌干达HIV/AIDS研究出版物趋势的文献计量学分析

Alice Gitta Kutyamukama, A. Mohammed, C. Okello-Obura
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摘要

背景:人体免疫缺陷病毒(艾滋病毒)流行病仍然是一个主要的全球健康问题,大约有3 800万人患有这种疾病,其中三分之二以上(2 540万人)生活在世卫组织非洲区域。到2020年,68万人将死于与艾滋病毒有关的原因,150万人将感染这种病毒。采用文献计量学方法调查和分析乌干达艾滋病毒/获得性免疫缺陷综合征(艾滋病)的科学研究进展。方法:对1982年至2020年在乌干达发表的艾滋病毒/艾滋病文献进行全面的回顾性文献计量学分析,并使用Harzing的出版或灭亡进行检索。我们从Google Scholar数据库中提取了这些出版物。为了确保所有检索到的出版物都涉及乌干达的艾滋病毒/艾滋病问题,使用keywords字段执行以“HIV”或“AIDS”和“乌干达”为关键字的搜索策略来优化结果。结果:共入选文献446篇。结果表明,相对增长率(RGR)从1996年的0.29上升到2020年的3.40,各年之间有一定波动,从1996年的2.39下降到2020年的0.20,各年之间有轻微波动。大多数出版物(60.3%)是由一位作者撰写的,其余的(15.2%)是由两位作者合作撰写的。超过一半(59.64%)的出版物至少被引用一次。在乌干达,关于艾滋病毒/艾滋病的研究大多是由国际期刊出版商而不是非洲期刊出版商发表的。在乌干达,与医学相关的期刊发表了最多关于艾滋病毒/艾滋病研究的文章,而与性别相关的期刊发表的文章最少。结论:根据研究结果,在乌干达,艾滋病毒/艾滋病研究人员的合作通常很差,研究人员倾向于与Francis and Taylor、Springer、Elsevier和Wiley合作,而不是与其他出版商合作。然而,随着时间的推移,艾滋病毒/艾滋病的研究相对增长。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bibliometric Analysis of HIV/AIDS Research Publication Trends in Uganda from 1982 to 2020
Background: The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic continues to be a major global health concern, with approximately 38 million people living with the disease, with over two-thirds of those (25.4 million) living in the WHO African Region. In 2020, 680,000 people will die from HIV-related causes, while 1.5 million will acquire the virus. Bibliometric methodologies were used to investigate and analyze the scientific research development on HIV/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in Uganda. Methods: A comprehensive retrospective bibliometric analysis was performed on HIV/AIDS literature in Uganda published from 1982 until 2020 and was retrieved using Harzing’s Publish or Perish. We extracted the publications from the Google Scholar database. To ensure all retrieved publications address HIV/AIDS issues in Uganda, a search strategy with "HIV" or "AIDS" and "Uganda" as keywords was performed using the keywords field to refine the results. Results: A total of 446 publications were selected and used. The findings indicated that Relative Growth Rate (RGR) had increased from 0.29 (1996) to 3.40 (2020) with some fluctuations between the years, with a decreasing trend from 2.39 (1996) to 0.20 (2020) with slight fluctuations between the years. The majority of publications (60.3 percent) were written by a single author, with the remainder (15.2%) written collaboratively by two writers.More than half (59.64%) of the publications were cited at least once. In Uganda, research on HIV/AIDS is mostly published by international journal publishers rather than African journal publishers. Journals of medicine-related titles have the most articles published about HIV/AIDS research in Uganda, while gender-related journals have the least. Conclusion: According to the findings, in Uganda, HIV/AIDS researchers generally collaborated poorly, and researchers tended to publish more with Francis and Taylor, Springer, Elsevier, and Wiley than with other publishers. However, there was relative HIV/AIDS research growth overtime.
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