TY - JOUR
T1 - Scientific publication productivity of Libyan medical schools
T2 - A bibliometric study of papers listed in PubMed, 1988-2007
AU - Benamer, H. T.S.
AU - Bredan, A.
AU - Bakoush, O.
PY - 2009/8
Y1 - 2009/8
N2 - Background: Scientific publication is a vital mission of medical schools and it is important to periodically document how well schools fulfil this mission. Aims: This study aimed to analyse the publication record of Libyan medical schools in international journals indexed in PubMed between 1988 and 2007. Methods: Medline was searched using PubMed for publications affiliated to Libya during 1988-2007. Results: Out of 417 papers related to Libya, 348 (84%) are affiliated to the medical schools and related hospitals. More than 60% of the 348 papers are affiliated to Al-Arab Medical University, Benghazi, while Al-Fateh Medical University, Tripoli, contributed 103 papers (30%). The rest of the papers (n=25, 7%) were published by medical schools in other parts of the country. The publication rate declined by 3% annually between 1988 and 2007. The decline was mainly due to a decrease in the publication rate by Al-Arab Medical University, Benghazi. Overall, nine departments produced 10 or more papers each. Out of about 1675 staff members, there are only 148 first authors and 207 last authors. The estimated annual publication rate is 0.7 papers per 100 academic staff members. Conclusion: This study reveals that published scholarship of the Libyan medical schools is extremely low, that the publication rate has declined, and that most academic staff have no publications listed in PubMed. This issue needs urgent attention.
AB - Background: Scientific publication is a vital mission of medical schools and it is important to periodically document how well schools fulfil this mission. Aims: This study aimed to analyse the publication record of Libyan medical schools in international journals indexed in PubMed between 1988 and 2007. Methods: Medline was searched using PubMed for publications affiliated to Libya during 1988-2007. Results: Out of 417 papers related to Libya, 348 (84%) are affiliated to the medical schools and related hospitals. More than 60% of the 348 papers are affiliated to Al-Arab Medical University, Benghazi, while Al-Fateh Medical University, Tripoli, contributed 103 papers (30%). The rest of the papers (n=25, 7%) were published by medical schools in other parts of the country. The publication rate declined by 3% annually between 1988 and 2007. The decline was mainly due to a decrease in the publication rate by Al-Arab Medical University, Benghazi. Overall, nine departments produced 10 or more papers each. Out of about 1675 staff members, there are only 148 first authors and 207 last authors. The estimated annual publication rate is 0.7 papers per 100 academic staff members. Conclusion: This study reveals that published scholarship of the Libyan medical schools is extremely low, that the publication rate has declined, and that most academic staff have no publications listed in PubMed. This issue needs urgent attention.
KW - Biomedical Publications
KW - Libya
KW - Medical schools
KW - Medline
KW - PubMed
KW - Research
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=73349110367&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=73349110367&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
C2 - 20029754
AN - SCOPUS:73349110367
SN - 1357-6283
VL - 22
JO - Education for Health: Change in Learning and Practice
JF - Education for Health: Change in Learning and Practice
IS - 2
ER -