Abstract

BackgroundGeneral practitioners and medical specialists mainly rely on one "general medical" journal to keep their medical knowledge up to date. Nevertheless, it is not known if these journals display the same overview of the medical knowledge in different specialties. The aims of this study were to measure the relative weight of the different specialties in the major journals of general medicine, to evaluate the trends in these weights over a ten-year period and to compare the journals.MethodsThe 14,091 articles published in The Lancet, the NEJM, the JAMA and the BMJ in 1997, 2002 and 2007 were analyzed. The relative weight of the medical specialities was determined by categorization of all the articles, using a categorization algorithm which inferred the medical specialties relevant to each article MEDLINE file from the MeSH terms used by the indexers of the US National Library of Medicine to describe each article.ResultsThe 14,091 articles included in our study were indexed by 22,155 major MeSH terms, which were categorized into 81 different medical specialties. Cardiology and Neurology were in the first 3 specialties in the 4 journals. Five and 15 specialties were systematically ranked in the first 10 and first 20 in the four journals respectively. Among the first 30 specialties, 23 were common to the four journals. For each speciality, the trends over a 10-year period were different from one journal to another, with no consistency and no obvious explanatory factor.ConclusionsOverall, the representation of many specialties in the four journals in general and internal medicine included in this study may differ, probably due to different editorial policies. Reading only one of these journals may provide a reliable but only partial overview.

Highlights

  • General practitioners and medical specialists mainly rely on one “general medical” journal to keep their medical knowledge up to date

  • In 1901, the Journal of the American Medical Association stated that “it is practically out of the question to be in touch with all the literature issued in any one department of medicine, because of the expense and time it would involve to attempt to master the stuff sufficiently well to separate the wheat from the chaff” [1]

  • We considered in this study the major journals, in terms of Impact Factor, of the subject category “Medicine, General & Internal” of the Journal of Citation Report

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Summary

Introduction

General practitioners and medical specialists mainly rely on one “general medical” journal to keep their medical knowledge up to date. In 1901, the Journal of the American Medical Association stated that “it is practically out of the question to be in touch with all the literature issued in any one department of medicine, because of the expense and time it would involve to attempt to master the stuff sufficiently well to separate the wheat from the chaff” [1]. This phenomenon has not waned since and physicians face a dramatic challenge when they try to keep up to date with medical knowledge. We aimed at assessing the trends in these relative weights over a ten-year period and to compare the journals

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