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Mapping the tuberculosis scientific landscape among BRICS countries: a bibliometric and network analysis.

Authors :
Castor K
Mota FB
da Silva RM
Cabral BP
Maciel EL
de Almeida IN
Arakaki-Sanchez D
Andrade KB
Testov V
Vasilyeva I
Zhao Y
Zhang H
Singh M
Rao R
Tripathy S
Gray G
Padayatchi N
Bhagwandin N
Swaminathan S
Kasaeva T
Kritski A
Source :
Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz [Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz] 2020 Mar 16; Vol. 115, pp. e190342. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Mar 16 (Print Publication: 2020).
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: The five BRICS (Brazil, Russian, Indian, China, and South Africa) countries bear 49% of the world's tuberculosis (TB) burden and they are committed to ending tuberculosis.<br />Objectives: The aim of this paper is to map the scientific landscape related to TB research in BRICS countries.<br />Methods: Were combined bibliometrics and social network analysis techniques to map the scientific publications related to TB produced by the BRICS. Was made a descriptive statistical data covering the full period of analysis (1993-2016) and the research networks were made for 2007-2016 (8,366 records). The bubble charts were generated by VantagePoint and the networks by the Gephi 0.9.1 software (Gephi Consortium 2010) from co-occurrence matrices produced in VantagePoint. The Fruchterman-Reingold algorithm provided the networks' layout.<br />Findings: During the period 1993-2016, there were 38,315 peer-reviewed, among them, there were 11,018 (28.7%) articles related by one or more authors in a BRICS: India 38.7%; China 23.8%; South Africa 21.1%; Brazil 13.0%; and Russia 4.5% (The total was greater than 100% because our criterion was all papers with at least one author in a BRICS). Among the BRICS, there was greater interaction between India and South Africa and organisations in India and China had the highest productivity; however, South African organisations had more interaction with countries outside the BRICS. Publications by and about BRICS generally covered all research areas, especially those in India and China covered all research areas, although Brazil and South Africa prioritised infectious diseases, microbiology, and the respiratory system.<br />Main Conclusions: An overview of BRICS scientific publications and interactions highlighted the necessity to develop a BRICS TB research plan to increase efforts and funding to ensure that basic science research successfully translates into products and policies to help end the TB epidemic.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1678-8060
Volume :
115
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32187325
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1590/0074-02760190342