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PUBLICATION RATES AND CITATION INDICES OF FIVE MAJOR SPINE MEETINGS – WHICH SPINE MEETINGS HAVE THE HIGHEST VALUE?



Abstract

Aim: To measure the quality of five major scientific meetings by assessing the publication rate of papers presented and recording their citation index.

Material and Methods: Abstracts of podium presentations at the meetings of the Scoliosis Research Society, International Society for the Study of the Lumbar Spine, British Scoliosis Society, BritSpine and Eurospine were included. We performed a Medline search to identify publications from the abstract. We calculated the time from meeting to publication and recorded the citation rate of the articles.

Results: Of 396 abstracts, 182 were published in peer-review journals – a publication rate of 46%. The publication rates of the five meetings (SRS, BSS, ISSLS, Eurospine, Britspine) were 69%, 53%, 51%, 38%, 24% respectively. Most publications were in “Spine” (55%), then European Spine Journal (11%). The median citation rate of the papers from the SRS, ISSLS, BSS, Eurospine, Britspine meetings was 3, 3, 3, 2, and 1 respectively. The average time to publication was 16 months.

Discussion & Conclusions: Podium presentation is a valuable means for the dissemination of research findings. However, a paper in a peer-reviewed journal is subjected to greater scrutiny, and is perhaps a better indicator of the work’s merit.

The average rate of publication in medicine following presentation is 45%1. Spinal meetings are within this range.

Although the quality of the scientific work is not the only factor to determine publication, and nor is the quality of the presentations the only factor to assess in evaluating a meeting, the rate of publication and citation rate provide an indicator of the quality and scientific level of meetings.

Correspondence should be addressed to: Sue Woodward, Secreteriat, Britspine, Vale Clinic, Hensol Park, Vale of Glamorgan, CF72 8JY Wales.

Reference:

1 Scherer R, Langenberg P. Full publication of results initially presented in abstracts (Cochrane Methodology Review). In: the Cochrane Library, Issue 2, 2002. Oxford, UK: Update Software Google Scholar