4.6 Article

Fifty Years of Global Cardiovascular Research in Africa: A Scientometric Analysis, 1971 to 2021

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.122.027670

Keywords

Africa; bibliometric; cardiovascular research; h-index; scientometry

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This study analyzed the quantity and impact of cardiovascular research in Africa, as well as the determinants and patterns of research collaboration. It found that despite progress, the output of cardiovascular research from African authors remains low. Therefore, urgent measures are needed to improve the quantity and quality of cardiovascular research in Africa, including increased investments, human resource training, improved infrastructures, and expanded collaborative research networks, particularly within Africa.
Background To analyze the quantity and impact of cardiovascular research done in Africa or coauthored by researchers based in Africa, their determinants, and the patterns of research collaboration. Methods and Results We retrieved data from Web of Science and additional sources. We analyzed temporal trends from 1971 to 2021 and geographical distribution, research impact using country-level h-index, international research cooperation, and associations of research quantity and quality using linear regression. The annual volume of cardiovascular research from Africa has increased from 4 publications in 1971 to 3867 in 2020 and currently represents similar to 3% of the global cardiovascular research output. Authors from South Africa (28.1%) and Egypt (24.1%) accounted for more than half of all publications from African countries, and they had the highest h-index (209 and 111, respectively). Important collaborators outside Africa included the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Australia. The country's publication count was associated with larger population size (P < 0.001), whereas the country's h-index was associated with larger population size (P=0.001) and higher human development index (P=0.023). International collaboration was dominated by the United States, South Africa, United Kingdom, Egypt, and Canada. The level of collaboration between African countries was lower than their collaboration with non-African countries. Conclusions Cardiovascular research output from African authors remains low, despite marked progress over the past 5 decades. These findings highlight the urgent need to improve the quantity and quality of cardiovascular research in Africa through increased investments, training of human resources, improved infrastructures, and expansion of collaborative research networks, particularly within Africa.

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