The H-index as a quantitative indicator of the relative impact of human diseases.

Assessment of the relative impact of diseases and pathogens is important for agencies and other organizations charged with providing disease surveillance, management and control. It also helps funders of disease-related research to identify the most important areas for investment. Decisions as to wh...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: K Marie McIntyre, Iain Hawkes, Agnès Waret-Szkuta, Serge Morand, Matthew Baylis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21625581/pdf/?tool=EBI
id doaj-46f866c221244b1dbb4921071f70e311
record_format Article
spelling doaj-46f866c221244b1dbb4921071f70e3112021-03-04T01:53:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0165e1955810.1371/journal.pone.0019558The H-index as a quantitative indicator of the relative impact of human diseases.K Marie McIntyreIain HawkesAgnès Waret-SzkutaSerge MorandMatthew BaylisAssessment of the relative impact of diseases and pathogens is important for agencies and other organizations charged with providing disease surveillance, management and control. It also helps funders of disease-related research to identify the most important areas for investment. Decisions as to which pathogens or diseases to target are often made using complex risk assessment approaches; however, these usually involve evaluating a large number of hazards as it is rarely feasible to conduct an in-depth appraisal of each. Here we propose the use of the H-index (or Hirsch index) as an alternative rapid, repeatable and objective means of assessing pathogen impact. H-index scores for 1,414 human pathogens were obtained from the Institute for Scientific Information's Web of Science (WOS) in July/August 2010. Scores were compared for zoonotic/non-zoonotic, and emerging/non-emerging pathogens, and across taxonomic groups. H-indices for a subset of pathogens were compared with Disability Adjusted Life Year (DALY) estimates for the diseases they cause. H-indices ranged from 0 to 456, with a median of 11. Emerging pathogens had higher H-indices than non-emerging pathogens. Zoonotic pathogens tended to have higher H-indices than human-only pathogens, although the opposite was observed for viruses. There was a significant correlation between the DALY of a disease and the H-index of the pathogen(s) that cause it. Therefore, scientific interest, as measured by the H-index, appears to be a reflection of the true impact of pathogens. The H-index method can be utilized to set up an objective, repeatable and readily automated system for assessing pathogen or disease impact.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21625581/pdf/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K Marie McIntyre
Iain Hawkes
Agnès Waret-Szkuta
Serge Morand
Matthew Baylis
spellingShingle K Marie McIntyre
Iain Hawkes
Agnès Waret-Szkuta
Serge Morand
Matthew Baylis
The H-index as a quantitative indicator of the relative impact of human diseases.
PLoS ONE
author_facet K Marie McIntyre
Iain Hawkes
Agnès Waret-Szkuta
Serge Morand
Matthew Baylis
author_sort K Marie McIntyre
title The H-index as a quantitative indicator of the relative impact of human diseases.
title_short The H-index as a quantitative indicator of the relative impact of human diseases.
title_full The H-index as a quantitative indicator of the relative impact of human diseases.
title_fullStr The H-index as a quantitative indicator of the relative impact of human diseases.
title_full_unstemmed The H-index as a quantitative indicator of the relative impact of human diseases.
title_sort h-index as a quantitative indicator of the relative impact of human diseases.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Assessment of the relative impact of diseases and pathogens is important for agencies and other organizations charged with providing disease surveillance, management and control. It also helps funders of disease-related research to identify the most important areas for investment. Decisions as to which pathogens or diseases to target are often made using complex risk assessment approaches; however, these usually involve evaluating a large number of hazards as it is rarely feasible to conduct an in-depth appraisal of each. Here we propose the use of the H-index (or Hirsch index) as an alternative rapid, repeatable and objective means of assessing pathogen impact. H-index scores for 1,414 human pathogens were obtained from the Institute for Scientific Information's Web of Science (WOS) in July/August 2010. Scores were compared for zoonotic/non-zoonotic, and emerging/non-emerging pathogens, and across taxonomic groups. H-indices for a subset of pathogens were compared with Disability Adjusted Life Year (DALY) estimates for the diseases they cause. H-indices ranged from 0 to 456, with a median of 11. Emerging pathogens had higher H-indices than non-emerging pathogens. Zoonotic pathogens tended to have higher H-indices than human-only pathogens, although the opposite was observed for viruses. There was a significant correlation between the DALY of a disease and the H-index of the pathogen(s) that cause it. Therefore, scientific interest, as measured by the H-index, appears to be a reflection of the true impact of pathogens. The H-index method can be utilized to set up an objective, repeatable and readily automated system for assessing pathogen or disease impact.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21625581/pdf/?tool=EBI
work_keys_str_mv AT kmariemcintyre thehindexasaquantitativeindicatoroftherelativeimpactofhumandiseases
AT iainhawkes thehindexasaquantitativeindicatoroftherelativeimpactofhumandiseases
AT agneswaretszkuta thehindexasaquantitativeindicatoroftherelativeimpactofhumandiseases
AT sergemorand thehindexasaquantitativeindicatoroftherelativeimpactofhumandiseases
AT matthewbaylis thehindexasaquantitativeindicatoroftherelativeimpactofhumandiseases
AT kmariemcintyre hindexasaquantitativeindicatoroftherelativeimpactofhumandiseases
AT iainhawkes hindexasaquantitativeindicatoroftherelativeimpactofhumandiseases
AT agneswaretszkuta hindexasaquantitativeindicatoroftherelativeimpactofhumandiseases
AT sergemorand hindexasaquantitativeindicatoroftherelativeimpactofhumandiseases
AT matthewbaylis hindexasaquantitativeindicatoroftherelativeimpactofhumandiseases
_version_ 1714809110777561088