Publication of research presented at STFM and NAPCRG conferences.

Robert E Post, Arch G Mainous, Kendal E O'Hare, Dana E King, Mario S Maffei
Author Information
  1. Robert E Post: Virtua Family Medicine Residency, Voorhees, New Jersey, USA. rpost@virtua.org

Abstract

PURPOSE: Presentations of research are important in the dissemination of new knowledge, but they do not reach the same audience as research published in journals. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the proportion of presentations at recent major primary care research conferences that have become published.
METHODS: Oral and poster presentations for completed and work-in-progress projects from the 2007 and 2008 North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG) and Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM) annual conferences were included in the analysis. The first presenter for each presentation was searched on PubMed, and titles and abstracts for presentations were compared for content to titles and abstracts of potential matches found on PubMed. We analyzed the proportion of presentations that were published in peer-reviewed journals, mean time to publication, and the proportions of the type of journal in which the article appeared (family medicine vs other) were analyzed.
RESULTS: There were 1,329 presentations included in the study. Overall, 34.4% of projects presented were also published. More oral presentations (42.9%) were published than were poster presentations (25.3%) (P <.001). Mean time to publication was 15.4 months. Oral presentations were published more quickly (13.7 months) than poster presentations (18.6 months) (P <.001). Published reports appeared in 192 different journals. Family medicine journals accounted for 36.5% of published.
CONCLUSIONS: More than one-third of all presentations at STFM and NAPCRG conferences were published in journals indexed in PubMed. Time to publication was comparable to that of other specialties. Fewer than 2 of every 5 reports were published are in a family medicine journal, suggesting vast breadth in family medicine research. Family medicine academicians need to refocus efforts on transforming presentations into published articles in peer-reviewed journals for broader dissemination of research findings.

Keywords

References

  1. Fam Med. 2009 Feb;41(2):120-5 [PMID: 19184690]
  2. Acad Med. 2004 Jul;79(7):617-22 [PMID: 15234910]
  3. Fam Med. 1994 Jun;26(6):352-5 [PMID: 8050655]
  4. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2007 Apr 18;(2):MR000005 [PMID: 17443628]
  5. J Fam Pract. 1996 Feb;42(2):199-203 [PMID: 8606312]
  6. Eur Spine J. 2012 Oct;21(10):2105-12 [PMID: 22398641]
  7. Menopause. 2008 Sep-Oct;15(5):996-1001 [PMID: 18446091]
  8. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2003 Jan;85(1):158-63 [PMID: 12533587]
  9. Ann Fam Med. 2011 Jul-Aug;9(4):372-3 [PMID: 21747110]
  10. Arch Dis Child. 2000 Dec;83(6):524-6 [PMID: 11087295]
  11. Fam Med. 2002 Oct;34(9):678-84 [PMID: 12455253]
  12. Fam Med. 2012 May;44(5):312-7 [PMID: 23027112]
  13. J Pediatr Orthop. 2012 Mar;32(2):e6-e10 [PMID: 22327460]
  14. J Urol. 2006 Dec;176(6 Pt 1):2624-9; discussion 2629 [PMID: 17085176]
  15. Eur J Gen Pract. 2010 Jun;16(2):100-5 [PMID: 20504264]
  16. J Am Board Fam Med. 2006 Jan-Feb;19(1):93-7 [PMID: 16492011]

MeSH Term

Congresses as Topic
Evidence-Based Medicine
Family Practice
Humans
Internal Medicine
Organizational Objectives
Primary Health Care
Societies, Medical
United States

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0presentationspublishedresearchjournalsmedicineconferencesdisseminationposterNAPCRGFamilySTFMPubMedpublicationfamilymonthsstudyproportionOralprojectsincludedtitlesabstractsanalyzedpeer-reviewedtimejournalappearedpresentedP<001reportsPURPOSE:PresentationsimportantnewknowledgereachaudiencepurposeevaluaterecentmajorprimarycarebecomeMETHODS:completedwork-in-progress20072008NorthAmericanPrimaryCareResearchGroupSocietyTeachersMedicineannualanalysisfirstpresenterpresentationsearchedcomparedcontentpotentialmatchesfoundmeanproportionstypearticlevsRESULTS:1329Overall344%alsooral429%253%Mean154quickly137186Published192differentaccounted365%CONCLUSIONS:one-thirdindexedTimecomparablespecialtiesFewer2every5suggestingvastbreadthacademiciansneedrefocuseffortstransformingarticlesbroaderfindingsPublicationpublicationsreport

Similar Articles

Cited By