An examination of the effect of open versus paywalled access publication on the disseminative impact and citation count of publications in intensive care medicine and anesthesia

We aimed to assess the impact of open access (OA) versus paywalled access (PA) publication on Altmetric Attention Scores (AAS) and whether AAS correlates with future citation count access in the context of intensive care medicine (ICM) and anesthesia. 1854 and 2935 publications, in the year 2015, we...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of critical care Vol. 46; pp. 88 - 93
Main Authors Black, Colin S., Lehane, Daniel J., Burns, Chris, O'Donnell, Brian D.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.08.2018
Elsevier Limited
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Summary:We aimed to assess the impact of open access (OA) versus paywalled access (PA) publication on Altmetric Attention Scores (AAS) and whether AAS correlates with future citation count access in the context of intensive care medicine (ICM) and anesthesia. 1854 and 2935 publications, in the year 2015, were identified in ICM and anesthesia respectively, using a Pubmed search. The mean AAS was measured for each article. More ICM articles were OA, compared to of anesthesia articles (38.9% v 35.0% p = 0.02). The mean AAS for OA ICM publications was significantly higher than that of PA ICM publications (17.34 vs 8.45, p < 0.01), however, this was not observed when examined in a fixed follow up time frame. AAS appear to correlate with future citation counts. ICM publications that are available as OA in the medium term result in higher AAS when compared to PA publications, this phenomenon was not observed in anesthesia. AAS correlate with future citation counts, however, a larger study is required to confirm this. •We aimed to determine if publishing in the open access forum increases dissemination of scholarly articles•ICM researchers have embraced open access publication as shown by a high proportion of articles available as open access•Allowing a scholarly article to be available as open access in the medium term can potentially increase its dissemination•The hybrid publishing approach has a strong influence over what articles are shared online•Altmetrics appear to correlate with future citation counts although a prospective study is needed to confirm this
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ISSN:0883-9441
1557-8615
DOI:10.1016/j.jcrc.2018.05.008