Abstract

Background: Over the past few decades, there has been an increase in the number of open access (OA) journals in almost all disciplines. This increase in OA journals was accompanied an increase in funding to support such movements. Medical fields are among the highest funded fields, which further promoted its journals to move toward OA publishing. Here, we aim to compare OA and non-OA journals in terms of citation metrics and other indices. Methods: We collected data on the included journals from Scopus Source List on 1 st November 2018. We filtered the list for medical journals only. For each journal, we extracted data regarding citation metrics, scholarly output, and wither the journal is OA or non-OA. Results: On the 2017 Scopus list of journals, there was 5835 medical journals. Upon analyzing the difference between medical OA and non-OA journals, we found that OA journals had a significantly higher CiteScore (p< 0.001), percent cited (p< 0.001), and source normalized impact per paper (SNIP) (p< 0.001), whereas non-OA journals had higher scholarly output (p< 0.001). Among the five largest journal publishers, Springer Nature published the highest frequency of OA articles (31.5%), while Wiley-Blackwell had the lowest frequency among its medical journals (4.4%). Conclusion: Among medical journals, although non-OA journals still have higher output in terms of articles per year, OA journals have higher citation metrics.

Highlights

  • Open access (OA) journals allow free academic articles, they enable any user to read, search, download, share, use them for indexing, print the full texts, or utilize them as data for software without being charged[1]

  • Open access Journals covered by Scopus are indicated as Open Access if the journal is listed in the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) and/or the Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources (ROAD)

  • CiteScore (p< 0.001): with a median of 1.19 (25–75%: 0.53–2.21) for open access (OA) journals, and a median of 1.06 (25–75%: 0.26–2.18) for non-OA journals

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Summary

Introduction

Open access (OA) journals allow free (access to/availability of) academic articles, they enable any user to read, search, download, share, use them for indexing, print the full texts, or utilize them as data for software without being charged[1]. According to Web of Science, published OA articles as a proportion of total publications increased from 9.5% to 24% from 1998 to 2018. These OA journals provide an accessed source of information, a source that is accessible even for developing and low income countries[2]. There are several databases that can be used to perform the bibliometric analysis, with each database having its own characteristics; these include Google Scholar, Pubmed (Only biomedical citations), Scopus, and Web of Science[4]. Conclusion: Among medical journals, non-OA journals still have higher output in terms of articles per year, OA journals have higher citation metrics

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