Abstract

Background and ObjectiveInclusion in systematic reviews is one important component in judging the potential impact of clinical studies upon practice and hence the ‘value for money’ of spending for clinical research. This study aims to quantify the distribution of countries of origin of clinical studies used in Cochrane Reviews (CRs), and to link these data to the size of a country and to its spending on research.MethodsRandom sample of publications used for CRs published in Issue 1 2008 and of publications used in CRs in the field of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). Publications without original data were excluded. Likely countries of origin determined based on abstracts/full texts. CIA World Factbook (population data) and OECD database (economic data) were used.Results1,000 random entries out of 140,005 references available in all specialities. In 876 (91.4%) of 959 eligible studies, country of origin was determined. The USA was the leading contributor (36.0% of the studies), followed by UK (13.4%), Canada (5.3%), Australia and Sweden (3.7%). In the CAM sample, country of origin was determined in 458 (93.5%) of 497 assessed studies. Again, the USA was the leading contributor (24.9%), with China also emerging as a significant contributor (24.7%) in this field. For both samples, the contribution of smaller countries (especially Scandinavian countries, Greece, and Ireland) became more noteworthy when considered in relation to population size and research spending.ConclusionsOur results support the leading roles of both the USA and the UK in publishing clinical papers. The emerging role of China can be seen, particularly related to CAM studies. Taking into account size of population and economic power, countries like France, Germany, Italy, and Spain provide small contributions. In contrast, smaller countries like Australia, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, New Zealand, and Sweden also play major roles.

Highlights

  • Back in 1747, the Scottish naval surgeon James Lind conducted one of the first controlled clinical trials (CCT) [1]

  • Our study aims to determine the contribution of clinical studies per country across all specialties and to examine the production of clinical studies in the field of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM)

  • The sample of CAM related studies was created from a selection of Cochrane Reviews, identified as CAM related reviews by the complementary and alternative medicine field of the Cochrane Collaboration [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Back in 1747, the Scottish naval surgeon James Lind conducted one of the first controlled clinical trials (CCT) [1]. Systematic reviews have a decisive role in clinical decision making [5,6]. Studies assessing the geographical distribution of clinical research activity have confirmed the leading role of the USA in publishing scientific papers in various fields: in the top 50 biomedical journals [7], clinical cardiology [8], clinical radiology [9], clinical oncology [10], drug trials [11] and biomedical research [12]. Inclusion in systematic reviews is one important component in judging the potential impact of clinical studies upon practice and the ‘value for money’ of spending for clinical research. This study aims to quantify the distribution of countries of origin of clinical studies used in Cochrane Reviews (CRs), and to link these data to the size of a country and to its spending on research

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