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Family Practice Advance Access originally published online on August 26, 2005
Family Practice 2005 22(5):570-575; doi:10.1093/fampra/cmi085
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© The Author (2005). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

PubMed perspective of family medicine research: where does it stand?

Kumara Mendisa,c and Indragit Solangaarachchib

a Faculty of Medicine, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka, b Computer Centre, Faculty of Medicine, University of Kelaniya Sri Lanka and c Present address: School of Rural Health P.O. Box. 1043 11, Moran Drive Dubbo NSW 2830 Australia

Correspondence to K. Mendis; Email: kmendis{at}med.usyd.edu.au

Objective. The aim of this study was to obtain a view of family medicine research by analyzing PubMed citations from 1960–2003.

Method. Family practice (FP) citations in PubMed from 1960 to 2003 were downloaded in MEDLINE format. This was written into relation database using ‘PubMed Grabber/Analyzer’ software developed at University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. Search Query Language (SQL) and online PubMed queries were used for further analysis.

Results. There were 50288 FP citations from 80 countries. Of these, 33712 (67%) citations were from 15 FP journals. United Kingdom (18760), United States (13584), Australia (3262), Canada (1848), Germany-west (1340) were the five countries which had the most citations and 22 countries had less than 5 citations. Van Weel C (118), Geyman JP (116), Olesen F (87), Jones R (83) and Knottnerus JA (82) were numerically, the top five authors. Only 921 authors had more than 10 citations and the vast majority of authors had only one citation. Letters (5121), review (2715), editorial (2259), randomized controlled trials-RCT (1585) and Meta-analysis (44) were the top publication types. 40 citations found under ‘qualitative research’.

Discussion. The relatively few PubMed FP citations (50288) are by a small number of academics in developed countries. Citations showed an upsurge from the mid 1980s to the late 1990's but reached a plateau in the new millennium.

Compared to PubMed citations from 1960–2003 in other specialties such as 2737655 for public health, 1151194 for cardiology & cardiovascular diseases and 318538 for medical informatics, the 50288 FP citations were paltry. Paucity of RCT (1585) and meta-analysis (44) was noted. The low ‘qualitative research’ citations (44) could have been due to the late introduction of the MeSH concept in 2003.

Conclusions. Priority should be given to increase FP research and also to ensure the indexing of FP journals that are not currently indexed in PubMed. Efforts to increase citations in Medline may not give the desired results because of low priority given primary care specialties such as family medicine in the USA. Alternative solution of a separate bibliographic database for FP similar to PsycInfo may be too costly.

Keywords. Family Medicine, Family Practice, General Practice, PubMed, Medical Informatics.


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