Relationship between quality and editorial leadership of biomedical research journals: a comparative study of Italian and UK journals.

<h4>Background</h4>The quality of biomedical reporting is guided by statements of several organizations. Although not all journals adhere to these guidelines, those that do demonstrate "editorial leadership" in their author community. To investigate a possible relationship betw...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Valerie Matarese
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-07-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/18596938/?tool=EBI
id doaj-b1eea3c2a44440838569b165ca8f8f58
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b1eea3c2a44440838569b165ca8f8f582021-03-03T22:22:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-07-0137e251210.1371/journal.pone.0002512Relationship between quality and editorial leadership of biomedical research journals: a comparative study of Italian and UK journals.Valerie Matarese<h4>Background</h4>The quality of biomedical reporting is guided by statements of several organizations. Although not all journals adhere to these guidelines, those that do demonstrate "editorial leadership" in their author community. To investigate a possible relationship between editorial leadership and journal quality, research journals from two European countries, one Anglophone and one non-Anglophone, were studied and compared. Quality was measured on a panel of bibliometric parameters while editorial leadership was evaluated from journals' instructions to authors.<h4>Methodology/principal findings</h4>The study considered all 76 Italian journals indexed in Medline and 76 randomly chosen UK journals; only journals both edited and published in these countries were studied. Compared to UK journals, Italian journals published fewer papers (median, 60 vs. 93; p = 0.006), less often had online archives (43 vs. 74; p<0.001) and had lower median values of impact factor (1.2 vs. 2.7, p<0.001) and SCImago journal rank (0.09 vs. 0.25, p<0.001). Regarding editorial leadership, Italian journals less frequently required manuscripts to specify competing interests (p<0.001), authors' contributions (p = 0.005), funding (p<0.001), informed consent (p<0.001), ethics committee review (p<0.001). No Italian journal adhered to COPE or the CONSORT and QUOROM statements nor required clinical trial registration, while these characteristics were observed in 15%-43% of UK journals (p<0.001). At multiple regression, editorial leadership predicted 37.1%-49.9% of the variance in journal quality defined by citation statistics (p<0.0001); confounding variables inherent to a cross-cultural comparison had a relatively small contribution, explaining an additional 6.2%-13.8% of the variance.<h4>Conclusions/significance</h4>Journals from Italy scored worse for quality and editorial leadership than did their UK counterparts. Editorial leadership predicted quality for the entire set of journals. Greater appreciation of international initiatives to improve biomedical reporting may help low-quality journals achieve higher status.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/18596938/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Valerie Matarese
spellingShingle Valerie Matarese
Relationship between quality and editorial leadership of biomedical research journals: a comparative study of Italian and UK journals.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Valerie Matarese
author_sort Valerie Matarese
title Relationship between quality and editorial leadership of biomedical research journals: a comparative study of Italian and UK journals.
title_short Relationship between quality and editorial leadership of biomedical research journals: a comparative study of Italian and UK journals.
title_full Relationship between quality and editorial leadership of biomedical research journals: a comparative study of Italian and UK journals.
title_fullStr Relationship between quality and editorial leadership of biomedical research journals: a comparative study of Italian and UK journals.
title_full_unstemmed Relationship between quality and editorial leadership of biomedical research journals: a comparative study of Italian and UK journals.
title_sort relationship between quality and editorial leadership of biomedical research journals: a comparative study of italian and uk journals.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-07-01
description <h4>Background</h4>The quality of biomedical reporting is guided by statements of several organizations. Although not all journals adhere to these guidelines, those that do demonstrate "editorial leadership" in their author community. To investigate a possible relationship between editorial leadership and journal quality, research journals from two European countries, one Anglophone and one non-Anglophone, were studied and compared. Quality was measured on a panel of bibliometric parameters while editorial leadership was evaluated from journals' instructions to authors.<h4>Methodology/principal findings</h4>The study considered all 76 Italian journals indexed in Medline and 76 randomly chosen UK journals; only journals both edited and published in these countries were studied. Compared to UK journals, Italian journals published fewer papers (median, 60 vs. 93; p = 0.006), less often had online archives (43 vs. 74; p<0.001) and had lower median values of impact factor (1.2 vs. 2.7, p<0.001) and SCImago journal rank (0.09 vs. 0.25, p<0.001). Regarding editorial leadership, Italian journals less frequently required manuscripts to specify competing interests (p<0.001), authors' contributions (p = 0.005), funding (p<0.001), informed consent (p<0.001), ethics committee review (p<0.001). No Italian journal adhered to COPE or the CONSORT and QUOROM statements nor required clinical trial registration, while these characteristics were observed in 15%-43% of UK journals (p<0.001). At multiple regression, editorial leadership predicted 37.1%-49.9% of the variance in journal quality defined by citation statistics (p<0.0001); confounding variables inherent to a cross-cultural comparison had a relatively small contribution, explaining an additional 6.2%-13.8% of the variance.<h4>Conclusions/significance</h4>Journals from Italy scored worse for quality and editorial leadership than did their UK counterparts. Editorial leadership predicted quality for the entire set of journals. Greater appreciation of international initiatives to improve biomedical reporting may help low-quality journals achieve higher status.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/18596938/?tool=EBI
work_keys_str_mv AT valeriematarese relationshipbetweenqualityandeditorialleadershipofbiomedicalresearchjournalsacomparativestudyofitalianandukjournals
_version_ 1714812646496141312