Oermann, Ashton, Edie, Conklin and Colleagues Publish Article in Journal of Advanced Nursing
Marilyn Oermann, Kathleen Ashton, Alison Edie and colleagues recently published an article entitled "A Bibliometric Analysis of 81 Articles That Represent Excellence in Nursing Publication" in the Journal of Advanced Nursing. Co-authors include Jamie Conklin, Duke Medical Center Librarian; Leslie Nicoll and Health Carter-Templeton.
Abstract
Aim: To analyze publication patterns of 81 articles included in a "virtual journal."
Background: From May - July 2017, editors submitted articles from their journals representing distinction in nursing research, education, or practice. Brief responses explained their rationale for article selection. This sample embodied a unique exemplar of excellence in nursing publication and warranted further bibliometric analysis, which was undertaken from February to May, 2018.
Design/Method: Using Scopus, each article (N = 81) was searched to obtain bibliographic information and subsequent second and third generation citations. Three concepts guided the analysis: 1) persistence, rate of subsequent citations over time; 2) reach, geographic distribution of subsequent citations; and 3) dissemination, specialty of follow-on citations represented as nursing or another discipline. Patterns among the second and third generation of citations were also examined.
Results: Of the 81 articles, 43 (53%) were cited at least once, resulting in 721 second generation citations. There was long-term persistence (N = 2094) over the third and fourth generation citations. There was a wide geographic reach, representing 41 states in the United States and 44 countries. Dissemination was broad with citations in the medical literature eclipsing nursing in the third generation. The highest cited articles were all research reports. Patterns of silos and ripple effect were identified. No pattern could be identified for the 31 articles with zero subsequent citations.
Conclusion: This study revealed the impact of articles perceived as exemplar representations of 80 different nursing journals. Nursing research is being widely read and cited, both within and outside the profession.