Introducción
The dissemination of research results in health sciences is generally done by publishing scientific articles, essays, documents or books that facilitate the exchange of ideas and the use of scientific evidence among the different local, regional and world academic communities. 1
The application of statistical methods, among others, to written communication products of research is known as bibliometrics. 2 This activity responds to the need to quantify scientific production in order to compare, measure and objectify it 3, and "also stands out for its maturity both in its praxis and in its conceptual theoretical development." (4, p11)
Bibliometrics is based on indicators and is defined as
"[...]a set of methodological knowledge applied to measure the number of documents published and their citations, according to their origin and authors, which ultimately contributes to the evaluation of the outputs of science" (1, p44).
Indicators enable the characterization of scientific activity, academic productivity and the impact of research. By tradition, the fundamental criterion used to assess the success of a researcher is the number of published works; researchers with a large number of publications are considered highly productive, experienced and successful.
However, at present, one of the most used indicators is h-index, which indicates scientific performance by analyzing the number of times that an author, publication or journal has been cited. 5 H-index is considered an easily accessible indicator because it can be looked for in Google Scholar; it measures the global impact and represents the influence of the author in a specific field of research, that is, the degree to which his/her work has been useful for other researchers. 6 Even so, it has some disadvantages because it can be manipulated in highly cited articles and analyzes all kinds of products (original articles, systematic reviews), giving the same value to all of them, and is influenced by the number of years the researcher has been working on a specific area. 7
Regarding journals, the SCOPUS database has the largest amount of abstracts and citations of peer-reviewed literature and has bibliometric tools to track, analyze and visualize research. 8 This instrument measures, on the other hand, the scientific prestige of the sources and classifies them by means of quartiles, being 1 (Q1) the highest impact score. SCOPUS has other scientific indicators that are used to evaluate and analyze publications, such as the SCImago Journal Rank (SJR), an indicator that provides a relative quality index of the journals included in the SCOPUS databases from 1996 onwards. 9 The SJR makes an estimation of the time an article of a journal has been cited over a period of 3 years and is useful to compare journals, since it classifies them according to their prestige. The Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP) is another indicator that measures the impact of a journal citation based on the total number of citations in a given field of research. 10
The bibliometrics of scientific production is also a benchmark for placing the faculties of medicine and health sciences in the national and international context. 5 The Universidad del Cauca is ranked ninth among Colombian universities in terms of scientific production 11; nevertheless, neither the university nor the Faculty of Health Sciences (FHS) have a system of permanent tracking of the production of their academic community nor of bibliometric indicators evaluating the volume and citations of their scientific production, which limits the information processes needed for accreditation and feedback of their research groups and their departments.
A preliminary work conducted at the Universidad del Cauca 12, also in the Faculty of Health Sciences (FHS), evaluated scientific-academic production by departments in the period 2010-2016. This study characterized the main author by sex, profession, employment and academic attainment while establishing the type of journal or means of dissemination of the scientific and academic production, as wellas the collaboration percentage with entities external to the FHS. (12) Still, not only the faculty but the entire university lack internal bibliometric studies. Given the current situation of the institution, it is important to continue carrying out works in this area and, in consequence, the objective of this study was to evaluate the scientific-academic activity of the FHS of Universidad del Cauca based on bibliometric production indicators of authors, visibility and impact. In this way, this line of research is strengthened and may be an incentive for other faculties, libraries and the university itself to begin the process of measuring their contributions.
Materials and methods
This was a descriptive, cross-sectional bibliometric research that considered as population all the academic scientific production of the FHS of the Universidad del Cauca, represented in the publication of articles in journals and periodicals. Certified production in the period between January 2010 and April 2016 was selected as sample; 183 products met the inclusion criteria. Certified academic scientific production -with ISSN (International Standard Serial Number)- was included and classified into different typologies (original research, review or other).
The search and localization of the information was structured in two phases. During phase 1, a thorough search was performed in the PubMed, MEDLINE, ScienceDirect, Cochrane Library, SCOPUS, LILACS, Google Scholar databases, in the databases of the Vice-Rector's Office for Research of the Universidad del Cauca, and in CVLaC curriculums to identify the academic production of the faculty in the period under study. The common strategy for searching title, abstracts, affiliation and authors was: Filiation: Universidad del Cauca/University of Cauca Date: Jan 2010 to Apr 2016 (Annex 1). The total result of the searches was debugged manually using the EndNote software (Windows OS). In phase 2, after obtaining the results of the initial search, a statement was sent to the heads of each department of the faculty for socialization. The statement requested the review of the search results and adding the production that was not included.
The 183 articles found were classified by language of publication and related health sciences area (basic, clinical-surgical, public health and others), taking into account abstract and full text reading.
Regarding the production of authors of the FHS, the type of the product, the year of publication and the number of citations were established by means of SCOPUS. In case the article of any author was duplicated, it was excluded.
With respect to the visibility of authors, the h-index was identified using Google Scholar, and the category of the main author as a researcher was established based on the system of the Administrative Department of Science, Technology and Innovation (Colciencias) through call 737 of 2015 13, and classified as Junior, Senior, Associate, New, Not recognized or Other. The association of the main author with some research group of the Universidad del Cauca was established.
The 10 main journals included in the SCOPUS database, where the authors of the FHS made their publications, were identified. The quartile, SJR and SNIP indicators from these journals were obtained.
Qualitative variables were summarized with absolute frequencies and proportions, and quantitative variables by means of descriptive statistics and graphs. The statistical package R was used for the analysis and the graphs were designed using the free statistical package RStudio. 14
Results
Phase 1 of the information search yielded 1 362 studies that met the inclusion criteria: 1 092 records were found in external databases and 270 in Latin American databases. 170 articles were excluded based on the evaluation of titles, 119 records based on the evaluation of the abstracts, and 865 records based on authors and affiliation, for a total of 1 154 articles excluded. Thus, 183 publications were included in the study after excluding 25 that were repeated or duplicated (Figure 1).
According to SCOPUS, the health area represents 11% of all the academic-scientific production of Universidad del Cauca, which places it in third, surpassed by computer sciences and engineering. 15
Publication language
Of the total production found, 157 articles (85.7%) were originally published in Spanish and 26 (14.2%) in English.
Distribution of production by area of knowledge
Of 183 articles produced by the professors of the FHS, 104 (63.7%) were from the clinical-surgical area. The basic areas and those related to public health contributed with 26 (14.2%) and 20 (10.9%) products, respectively.
The main authors, according to the number of citations, are presented in Table 1. Half of the scientific-academic production of these authors corresponds to original articles; there are also systematic and narrative reviews and a case report. 60% of the articles of the main authors of the faculty have some international collaboration.
Production and visibility of the main authors
Table 2 presents the top 10 authors by order of production according to the h-index found for the period 2010-2016. In addition, it also presents their category according to call 737 of 2 017 of Colciencias, the research group of Universidad del Cauca to which they belong, and the classification of the group.
VRI: Vice-Rector's Office for Research; NR: non-registered researcher; SG: author not associated to a research group; --: research group not registered in Colciencias or not endorsed by the Universidad del Cauca.
* Data retrieved from Google Scholar.
† Data taken from call 737 of 2017 of Colciencias.
‡ Data according to the Vice-Rector's Office for Research, Universidad del Cauca.
Source: Own elaboration.
Evaluation of citation indicators
Of the total of the journals or means of disclosure where the authors of the FHS of Universidad del Cauca published, 9 of them were found in SCOPUS (Table 3). The Cochrane Library and Burns belong to Q1 and have 4 and 2 products, respectively. The Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud of Universidad del Cauca, which is not registered in the SCOPUS platform, has the largest number of articles published by the authors of the same faculty during the study period.
Discussion
Medical research is a fundamental pillar of knowledge and demands vocation and basic training in methodological and ethical aspects that undergraduate and postgraduate medical training does not always include in its programs. 25,26 In Latin America, about two thirds of the professionals do not carry out research, having as main barriers lack of time, lack of knowledge in research methodology and lack of institutional culture that incorporates research as an usual task. 25 Some subjects, such as Health Research 27, and scientific production itself are not paid enough attention by medical schools, particularly at Universidad del Cauca.
The production of the FHS during the period 2010-2016 was 183 studies. 157 articles (85.7%) were published in Spanish and were mainly related to the clinical area. Today, this result is a normal trend in Latin America, where many researchers do not write in English yet. The articles of the top 10 authors were mostly written in collaboration with international authors and in English. This collaboration is likely to be important when publishing in English-language journals, as they have greater visibility. 28
According to the analysis carried out, the clinical-surgical area was the main area of publication (42.8%). In the study by Sisa et al.29 in Ecuador, the main thematic area was the clinical-surgical area with 60%. This result demonstrates the low level of research and publication in the core areas in the FHC. 12
The h-index is one of the most popular instruments for evaluating the impact and quality of a researcher's articles. Depending on the number of citations and the amount of scientific production, this index detects outstanding researchers within the area and measure their productivity; however, it should be considered that this index depends on the number of publications of the author, does not discriminate between the types of products, is strongly influenced by the age of the researcher, and does not allow comparing different areas of knowledge. 7,30,31
Romero-Torres et al.32 noted that the h-index was directly related to the years the author has devoted to research, but in Colombia this fact does not seem to be met given the relative science and technology backlog. The highest h-index found in this work was 11 and corresponds to Colciencias Senior Researchers, who usually have a PhD, have worked in international networks and have published in other languages.
Regarding the main authors of the FHS, only 30% of them were registered as researchers in Colciencias and were part of a research group registered in the Vice-Rector's Office for Research (VRI). These results show that most of the main authors of the FHS (70%) do not have any link to a group endorsed by Colciencias and their publications do not seem to come from a formal project registered in the VRI or have participated in any call. Today, the Universidad del Cauca has only two journals indexed in the Publindex registry of Colciencias, which makes evident the need for more publications of this type where both research groups and professors can publish.
Indirect measurement of academic quality can be done through intellectual and scientific production and bibliometric indicators that measure the quality and quantity of publications and allow evaluating individual researchers, journals and universities. 33 In 2010, Frenk et al.34 published a study on barriers to research among orthopedists; it is important to note that this Spanish study has a short version. 35 This study found little literature on the subject, but at the same time pointed out the concern for a necessary change in medical education that favors research, writing and publication. For researchers, it is also essential to go beyond the departmentalization of the knowledge plan proposed by Flexner in 1910 and avoid the so-called "tribalism" of the professions, in this case the departments, that is, their tendency to act in isolation or even compete among them. 34
Nowadays, 17 Colombian journals in the health area are registered in SCOPUS, but none of them belong to the Q1. 25 The Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud of Universidad del Cauca, the local journal, has the largest number of articles published by the authors of the same faculty during the study period, which shows that the authors of the FHS prefer publishing locally, perhaps because of a close relationship with the Editorial Committee and because of the easy access to the language in which its contents are published. 12 However, it is possible for this trend to change due to the new classification policies of the journals registered in Colciencias, which leave local or regional journals without an important support although they seek to avoid inbreeding in the publication.
According to the study by Rodríguez-Morales 26 at Universidad Tecnológica de Pereira, of the total of publications, 45.5% were published in quartile I journals (Q1), while the present study only found 3.2% articles published in Q1 journals. In that same study, of the total authors (n = 55) only one was classified in the Senior category, 10 in the Junior category and the others were not registered 26; these findings were similar to those of this investigation where only two authors were classified in said categories. These data clearly show that there are few researchers recognized by Colciencias in the FHS and that this seems to be a common reality in the faculties of health and medicine throughout the country. 36
Sánchez-Bello et al.37, in a study carried out between 2001 and 2015 in Colombia, highlight that the scientific production of a medical school can be considered essential, since new possibilities can be extended to improve the care provided to patients through innovation. In addition, the volume of scientific production of medical schools in Colombia is concentrated in a few universities, and may even appear to be null in other institutions. 38
In a consensus article of orthopedists on the barriers to research in Latin America 35, the authors found research designs difficult to carry out, as well as little ability to read journals in English, lack of incentives or academic recognition, poor funding for research projects and weak publication in high-impact journals. The authors considered that a solution to these barriers is using medical teaching models based on evidence-based medicine (EBM), give residents feasible and manageable research questions, seek support through incentives or grants, partner with universities with access to journals, and use databases to directly access information. 33
According to Sánchez-Bello et al.37, of the few professionals who investigate, 61% do not go beyond presenting an abstract in oral format or poster in congresses, and in fact about 40% of them never become an article and, of course, are never published in indexed journals. Therefore, according to the current policies of Colciencias on visibility and productivity it is difficult to generate any impact in the field of research. 38
However, many of the shortcomings exposed here can be solved by designing educational policies aimed at addressing the aforementioned barriers, promoting scientific culture, generating research groups or incubators and adopting the scientific method as the basis for medical research 26,39, but these policies also demand investment and interest. One of the implemented strategies has been the promoting the implementation of the scientific method in clinical practice, which, for nearly three decades, has fostered the EBM movement by promoting clinical actions based not only on experience but also on the critical reading of scientific publications. 40,41
Research groups or incubators are another strategic way to favor health research at the undergraduate level, because they help to appropriate the academic and institutional culture of educational and scientific processes. They are also the place where methodological tools can be strengthened, research processes can be experimented, products can be socialized and academic learning spaces can be strengthened. 42
Conclusion
These findings point out the need for greater institutional support for health research, the creation and support of research groups and incubators, and the promotion of academic programs for better proficiency in the English language to facilitate the production of new knowledge and, particularly, to ensure that the FHS and the Universidad del Cauca itself have a greater degree of visibility in both national and international scientific fields.