4.6 Article

Analytical mapping of information and communication technology in emerging infectious diseases using CiteSpace

Journal

TELEMATICS AND INFORMATICS
Volume 69, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.tele.2022.101796

Keywords

3D Printing; Artificial Intelligence; Medical Imaging; Big Data Analytics; Information and Communication Technology; Social Media; Mobile Technology; COVID-19

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This paper presents an ICT-assisted scientometric analysis of infectious diseases, assessing the international research status and trends. The research findings highlight the potential of mobile apps, telemedicine, and artificial intelligence technologies in reducing infectious disease threats. The COVID-19 outbreak, influenza, HIV, and malaria have been identified as research hotspots, while contact tracing applications and privacy concerns are recent challenges.
The prevalence of severe infectious diseases has become a major global health concern. Currently, the COVID-19 outbreak has spread across the world and has created an unprecedented humanitarian crisis. The proliferation of novel viruses has put traditional health systems under immense pressure and posed several serious issues. Henceforth, early detection, identification, rapid testing, and advanced surveillance systems are required to address public health emergencies. However, Information and Communication Technology (ICT) tackles several issues raised by this pandemic and significantly improves the quality of services in the health care sector. This paper presents an ICT-assisted scientometric analysis of infectious diseases, namely, airborne, food & waterborne, fomite-borne, sexually transmitted illnesses, and vector-borne illnesses. It assesses the international research status of this field in terms of citation structure, prolific journals, and country contributions. It has used the CiteSpace tool to address the visualization needs and indepth insights of scientific literature to pinpoint core hotspots, research frontiers, emerging research areas, and ICT trends. The research finding reveals that mobile apps, telemedicine, and artificial intelligence technologies have greater scope to reduce the threats of infectious diseases. COVID-19, influenza, HIV, and malaria viruses have been identified as research hotspots whereas COVID-19, contact tracing applications, security and privacy concerns about users' data are the recent challenges in this field that need to address. The United States has produced higher research output in all domains of infectious diseases. Furthermore, it explores the co-occurrence network analysis and intellectual landscape of each domain of infectious diseases. It provides potential research directions and insightful clues to researchers and the academic fraternity for further research.

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