A scientometric analysis on coronaviruses research (1900–2020): Time for a continuous, cooperative and global approach
Infectious diseases remain a complex, recurring, and challenging public health hazard. Coronaviruses have led to multidimensional consequences on health, mobility, and socio-economic conditions. Despite the significance and magnitude of impact from epidemics to the pandemic, literature is sparse on...
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doaj-2bb866f80a564778ba41b1fa05fab9082021-03-23T04:12:00ZengElsevierJournal of Infection and Public Health1876-03412021-03-01143311319A scientometric analysis on coronaviruses research (1900–2020): Time for a continuous, cooperative and global approachAhmad Azam Malik0Nadeem Shafique Butt1Mohammad Abid Bashir2Syed Amir Gilani3Department of Family and Community Medicine, Rabigh Faculty of Medicine, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; University Institute of Public Health, The University of Lahore, Lahore, Pakistan; Corresponding author at: Department of Family and Community Medicine, Ground Floor, Building # 13, Rabigh Faculty of Medicine, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.Department of Family and Community Medicine, Rabigh Faculty of Medicine, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi ArabiaDepartment of Surgery, Rabigh Faculty of Medicine, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi ArabiaFaculty of Allied Health Sciences, The University of Lahore, Lahore, PakistanInfectious diseases remain a complex, recurring, and challenging public health hazard. Coronaviruses have led to multidimensional consequences on health, mobility, and socio-economic conditions. Despite the significance and magnitude of impact from epidemics to the pandemic, literature is sparse on comprehensive coronaviruses related research performance over time. This study aimed at a scientometric evaluation of coronaviruses related literature including COVID-19. Data related to Coronavirus research was extracted from the Web of Science (WoS). All types of publications (28,846) were included and retrieved. To measure the quantity and quality of the publications, “R-Bibliometrix” package was used for detailed analysis exploring a wide range of indicators. Generally, an increasing trend was observed over time led by the USA and China followed by the United Kingdom, Europe, and few other developed countries. The last two decades contributed around 39.5% of documents while only 06 months of 2020 additionally contributed around 46.5% of total documents. Earlier shorter spikes of increased post epidemic publications followed by decreased productivity were detected in the last 2 decades and showed a lack of continuity-‘a research epidemic following a disease epidemic’. Articles (53.4%) were the most common publication type. Journal of Virology, British Medical Journal (BMJ), and Virology were leading sources while BMJ, and Lancet showed increased contributions recently. Overall, similar trends of top authors were observed in terms of productivity, impact, collaborations, funding sources, and affiliations with few exceptions mainly from affected regions. Top 20 countries contributed >89% of documents suggesting a lack of global efforts. Networking was found to be mainly among developed nations with limited contributions from resource-limited countries perhaps requiring more cooperation. Recent post-COVID publications rise is highest, unprecedented, and rapidly growing. Authors strongly recommend recent COVID-19 pandemic as a call for continuous, more cooperative, and collective global research.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1876034120307644CoronavirusCOVIDPublic healthBibliometricsWeb of science |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ahmad Azam Malik Nadeem Shafique Butt Mohammad Abid Bashir Syed Amir Gilani |
spellingShingle |
Ahmad Azam Malik Nadeem Shafique Butt Mohammad Abid Bashir Syed Amir Gilani A scientometric analysis on coronaviruses research (1900–2020): Time for a continuous, cooperative and global approach Journal of Infection and Public Health Coronavirus COVID Public health Bibliometrics Web of science |
author_facet |
Ahmad Azam Malik Nadeem Shafique Butt Mohammad Abid Bashir Syed Amir Gilani |
author_sort |
Ahmad Azam Malik |
title |
A scientometric analysis on coronaviruses research (1900–2020): Time for a continuous, cooperative and global approach |
title_short |
A scientometric analysis on coronaviruses research (1900–2020): Time for a continuous, cooperative and global approach |
title_full |
A scientometric analysis on coronaviruses research (1900–2020): Time for a continuous, cooperative and global approach |
title_fullStr |
A scientometric analysis on coronaviruses research (1900–2020): Time for a continuous, cooperative and global approach |
title_full_unstemmed |
A scientometric analysis on coronaviruses research (1900–2020): Time for a continuous, cooperative and global approach |
title_sort |
scientometric analysis on coronaviruses research (1900–2020): time for a continuous, cooperative and global approach |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Journal of Infection and Public Health |
issn |
1876-0341 |
publishDate |
2021-03-01 |
description |
Infectious diseases remain a complex, recurring, and challenging public health hazard. Coronaviruses have led to multidimensional consequences on health, mobility, and socio-economic conditions. Despite the significance and magnitude of impact from epidemics to the pandemic, literature is sparse on comprehensive coronaviruses related research performance over time. This study aimed at a scientometric evaluation of coronaviruses related literature including COVID-19. Data related to Coronavirus research was extracted from the Web of Science (WoS). All types of publications (28,846) were included and retrieved. To measure the quantity and quality of the publications, “R-Bibliometrix” package was used for detailed analysis exploring a wide range of indicators. Generally, an increasing trend was observed over time led by the USA and China followed by the United Kingdom, Europe, and few other developed countries. The last two decades contributed around 39.5% of documents while only 06 months of 2020 additionally contributed around 46.5% of total documents. Earlier shorter spikes of increased post epidemic publications followed by decreased productivity were detected in the last 2 decades and showed a lack of continuity-‘a research epidemic following a disease epidemic’. Articles (53.4%) were the most common publication type. Journal of Virology, British Medical Journal (BMJ), and Virology were leading sources while BMJ, and Lancet showed increased contributions recently. Overall, similar trends of top authors were observed in terms of productivity, impact, collaborations, funding sources, and affiliations with few exceptions mainly from affected regions. Top 20 countries contributed >89% of documents suggesting a lack of global efforts. Networking was found to be mainly among developed nations with limited contributions from resource-limited countries perhaps requiring more cooperation. Recent post-COVID publications rise is highest, unprecedented, and rapidly growing. Authors strongly recommend recent COVID-19 pandemic as a call for continuous, more cooperative, and collective global research. |
topic |
Coronavirus COVID Public health Bibliometrics Web of science |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1876034120307644 |
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