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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Bibliometric analysis of six nursing journals from the Web of Science, 2012-2017.

María Del Carmen Giménez-espertVicente Prado-gascó

subject

Research ReportBibliologíaBibliometricsCitas bibliográficas03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNursingCitation analysisBibliometríaHumans030212 general & internal medicineNurse educationCiencias médicasGeneral NursingPublishing030504 nursingImpact factorNursing researchScience Citation IndexScholarshipNursing ResearchBibliometricsEnfermeríaJournal Impact FactorPeriodicals as Topic0305 other medical scienceCitationPsychology

description

Aim The purpose of this study was to perform a bibliometric analysis of the six most important nursing journals according to the impact factor of the Science Citation Index through Web of Science®. The following journals were included: International Journal of Nursing Studies, Nurse Education Today, Journal of Nursing Scholarship, Nursing Outlook, Worldviews on Evidence‐Based Nursing and the Journal of Advanced Nursing. Background In the nursing field, bibliometric analysis and maps have been used to analyse the production of some journals but not for the comparison of different journals. Design/Method Using descriptive bibliometrics, we studied scientific production of different journals and bibliometric maps were used to visualize the content of published articles. Results The six journals included showed that 3937 articles were written by 11371 authors from 2980 institutions and 84 countries from 2012 ‐ 2017. Journal of Advanced Nursing had a greater number of publications and citations. The most prolific authors showed a tendency to publish first in Journal of Advanced Nursing and then in International Journal of Nursing Studies and Nurse Education Today. The frequency of citation was higher in International Journal of Nursing Studies followed by Journal of Advanced Nursing. The most collaborative authors and those with the most co‐citations published more than half of their publications in Journal of Advanced Nursing. The topics most commonly researched by these authors were job satisfaction, collaborative practices and nurse leaders. Conclusion This bibliometric analysis contributes to the understanding of the current state of nursing research and its evolution. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. Sin financiación 2.376 JCR (2018) Q1, 13/120 Nursing 1.007 SJR (2018) Q1, 9/152 Nursing (miscellaneous) No data IDR 2019 UEV

10.1111/jan.13868https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30289557