Military Medicine Publications: What has Happened in the Past Two Decades?

BackgroundMilitary medical personnel, like all other physician specialists, face the challenge of keeping updated with developments in their field of expertise, in view of the great amount of new medical information published in the literature. The availability of the Interne...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yavnai, Nirit, Huerta-Hartal, Michael, Mimouni, Francis, Pinkert, Moshe, Dagan, David, Kreiss, Yitshak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2014-05-01
Series:Interactive Journal of Medical Research
Online Access:http://www.i-jmr.org/2014/2/e10/
id doaj-fd2ae89e29984403ad8668cf018cd4e8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fd2ae89e29984403ad8668cf018cd4e82021-05-03T04:35:13ZengJMIR PublicationsInteractive Journal of Medical Research1929-073X2014-05-0132e1010.2196/ijmr.2748Military Medicine Publications: What has Happened in the Past Two Decades?Yavnai, NiritHuerta-Hartal, MichaelMimouni, FrancisPinkert, MosheDagan, DavidKreiss, Yitshak BackgroundMilitary medical personnel, like all other physician specialists, face the challenge of keeping updated with developments in their field of expertise, in view of the great amount of new medical information published in the literature. The availability of the Internet has triggered tremendous changes in publication characteristics, and in some fields, the number of publications has increased substantially. The emergence of electronic open access journals and the improvement in Web search engines has triggered a significant change in the publication processes and in accessibility of information. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to characterize the temporal trends in the number and types of publications in military medicine in the medical literature. MethodsWe searched all PubMed-registered publications from January 1, 1990 to December 31, 2010 using the keywords “military” or “army”. We used the publication tag in PubMed to identify and examine major publication types. The trends were tested using the Mann-Kendall test for trend. ResultsOur search yielded 44,443 publications in military medicine during the evaluation period. Overall, the number of publications showed two distinct phases over time: (1) a moderate increase from 1990 to 2001 with a mean annual increase of 2.78% (r2=.79, P<.002), and (2) a steeper mean annual increase of 11.20% (r2=.96, P<.002) from 2002 to 2010. Most of the examined publication types showed a similar pattern. The proportion of high-quality-of-evidence publication types (randomized controlled trials, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses) increased from 2.91% to 8.43% of the overall military medicine publications with a mean annual incremental increase of 14.20%. These publication types demonstrated a similar dual phase pattern of increase (10.01%, r2=.80, P<.002 for 1990-2001 and 20.66%, r2=.88, P<.002 for 2002-2010). ConclusionsWe conclude that over the past twenty years, scholarly work in the field of military medicine has shown a significant increase in volume, particularly among high quality publication types. However, practice guidelines remain rare, and meta-analyses are still limited in number.http://www.i-jmr.org/2014/2/e10/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yavnai, Nirit
Huerta-Hartal, Michael
Mimouni, Francis
Pinkert, Moshe
Dagan, David
Kreiss, Yitshak
spellingShingle Yavnai, Nirit
Huerta-Hartal, Michael
Mimouni, Francis
Pinkert, Moshe
Dagan, David
Kreiss, Yitshak
Military Medicine Publications: What has Happened in the Past Two Decades?
Interactive Journal of Medical Research
author_facet Yavnai, Nirit
Huerta-Hartal, Michael
Mimouni, Francis
Pinkert, Moshe
Dagan, David
Kreiss, Yitshak
author_sort Yavnai, Nirit
title Military Medicine Publications: What has Happened in the Past Two Decades?
title_short Military Medicine Publications: What has Happened in the Past Two Decades?
title_full Military Medicine Publications: What has Happened in the Past Two Decades?
title_fullStr Military Medicine Publications: What has Happened in the Past Two Decades?
title_full_unstemmed Military Medicine Publications: What has Happened in the Past Two Decades?
title_sort military medicine publications: what has happened in the past two decades?
publisher JMIR Publications
series Interactive Journal of Medical Research
issn 1929-073X
publishDate 2014-05-01
description BackgroundMilitary medical personnel, like all other physician specialists, face the challenge of keeping updated with developments in their field of expertise, in view of the great amount of new medical information published in the literature. The availability of the Internet has triggered tremendous changes in publication characteristics, and in some fields, the number of publications has increased substantially. The emergence of electronic open access journals and the improvement in Web search engines has triggered a significant change in the publication processes and in accessibility of information. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to characterize the temporal trends in the number and types of publications in military medicine in the medical literature. MethodsWe searched all PubMed-registered publications from January 1, 1990 to December 31, 2010 using the keywords “military” or “army”. We used the publication tag in PubMed to identify and examine major publication types. The trends were tested using the Mann-Kendall test for trend. ResultsOur search yielded 44,443 publications in military medicine during the evaluation period. Overall, the number of publications showed two distinct phases over time: (1) a moderate increase from 1990 to 2001 with a mean annual increase of 2.78% (r2=.79, P<.002), and (2) a steeper mean annual increase of 11.20% (r2=.96, P<.002) from 2002 to 2010. Most of the examined publication types showed a similar pattern. The proportion of high-quality-of-evidence publication types (randomized controlled trials, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses) increased from 2.91% to 8.43% of the overall military medicine publications with a mean annual incremental increase of 14.20%. These publication types demonstrated a similar dual phase pattern of increase (10.01%, r2=.80, P<.002 for 1990-2001 and 20.66%, r2=.88, P<.002 for 2002-2010). ConclusionsWe conclude that over the past twenty years, scholarly work in the field of military medicine has shown a significant increase in volume, particularly among high quality publication types. However, practice guidelines remain rare, and meta-analyses are still limited in number.
url http://www.i-jmr.org/2014/2/e10/
work_keys_str_mv AT yavnainirit militarymedicinepublicationswhathashappenedinthepasttwodecades
AT huertahartalmichael militarymedicinepublicationswhathashappenedinthepasttwodecades
AT mimounifrancis militarymedicinepublicationswhathashappenedinthepasttwodecades
AT pinkertmoshe militarymedicinepublicationswhathashappenedinthepasttwodecades
AT dagandavid militarymedicinepublicationswhathashappenedinthepasttwodecades
AT kreissyitshak militarymedicinepublicationswhathashappenedinthepasttwodecades
_version_ 1721484021695774720