Postgraduate publishing output in pediatric neurosurgery: correlation with fellowship site and individual scholars

The objective of this study was to analyze the publication output of postgraduate pediatric neurosurgery fellows for a 10-year period as well as identify 25 individual highly productive pediatric neurosurgeons. The correlation between academic productivity and the site of fellowship training was stu...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics Vol. 24; no. 3; p. 343
Main Authors Ajmera, Sonia, Lee, Ryan P, Schultz, Andrew, Hersh, David S, Lepard, Jacob, Xu, Raymond, Saad, Hassan, Akinduro, Olutomi, Justo, Melissa, Fraser, Brittany D, Motiwala, Mustafa, Dave, Pooja, Jimenez, Brian, Wallace, David A, Osikoya, Olufemi, Norrdahl, Sebastian, Dooley, Jennings H, Khan, Nickalus R, Vaughn, Brandy N, Maher, Cormac O, Klimo, Paul
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.09.2019
Subjects
Online AccessGet more information

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:The objective of this study was to analyze the publication output of postgraduate pediatric neurosurgery fellows for a 10-year period as well as identify 25 individual highly productive pediatric neurosurgeons. The correlation between academic productivity and the site of fellowship training was studied. Programs certified by the Accreditation Council for Pediatric Neurosurgery Fellowships that had 5 or more graduating fellows from 2006 to 2015 were included for analysis. Fellows were queried using Scopus for publications during those 10 years with citation data through 2017. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated, comparing program rankings of faculty against fellows using the revised Hirsch index (r-index; primary) and Hirsch index (h-index; secondary). A list of 25 highly accomplished individual academicians and their fellowship training locations was compiled. Sixteen programs qualified with 152 fellows from 2006 to 2015; 136 of these surgeons published a total of 2009 articles with 23,735 citations. Most publications were pediatric-specific (66.7%) clinical articles (93.1%), with middle authorship (55%). Co-investigators were more likely from residency than fellowship. There was a clustering of the top 7 programs each having total publications of around 120 or greater, publications per fellow greater than 12, more than 1200 citations, and adjusted ir10 (revised 10-year institutional h-index) and ih10 (10-year institutional h-index) values of approximately 2 or higher. Correlating faculty and fellowship program rankings yielded correlation coefficients ranging from 0.53 to 0.80. Fifteen individuals (60%) in the top 25 (by r5 index) list completed their fellowship at 1 of these 7 institutions. Approximately 90% of fellowship-trained pediatric neurosurgeons have 1 or more publications, but the spectrum of output is broad. There is a strong correlation between where surgeons complete their fellowships and postgraduate publications.
ISSN:1933-0715
DOI:10.3171/2019.4.PEDS18717