Need for Speed: Investigating Publication Times and Impact Factors of Plastic Surgery Journals.

Sahil Chawla, Sandeep Shelly, Rachel Phord-Toy, Faisal Khosa
Author Information
  1. Sahil Chawla: Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia; Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
  2. Sandeep Shelly: Emory Voice Center, Department of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Ga.
  3. Rachel Phord-Toy: Faculty of Science, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canda.
  4. Faisal Khosa: Department of Radiology, Vancouver General Hospital, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Prolonged publishing time in scientific journals can be discouraging for researchers because earlier publication can mean a higher h-index and more academic opportunities. In this study, we evaluated the publication time for articles in plastic Surgery journals compared with journals in Surgery and medicine. We also assessed correlations between publication speed and journal impact factors (IFs).
METHODS: The overall indexes of all plastic Surgery journals were compared with journals in the discipline of Surgery and medicine. In addition, we evaluated original articles published in all plastic surgical journals and the highest-ranking journals from various surgical subspecialties listed in the 2018 Journal Citation Report, assessing the time intervals from submission to publication, submission to acceptance, and acceptance to publication. Correlation between time interval and journal IF were analyzed.
RESULTS: A total of 18 plastic Surgery journals were compared with 210 surgical journals. Our study found that the IFs of journals significantly affect submission-to-acceptance times of the articles ( < 0.05, Wilcoxon test). The median submission-to-publication time for all plastic Surgery and all surgical journals was 29.7 weeks (IQR, 12.1 and 35.8) and 22.1 days (IQR,18.8 and 36.8), respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: There is a significant submission to publication time lag in plastic Surgery journals when compared with other nonplastic-Surgery journals. There was a positive correlation between submission-to publication time and IF for plastic Surgery journals but a negative correlation for Surgery journals (Spearman Correlation). In the last 14 years, plastic Surgery journals have remained slow in publishing articles.

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Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0journalssurgeryplastictimepublicationarticlescomparedsurgicalsubmission8publishingcanstudyevaluatedmedicinejournalIFsacceptanceCorrelationIF18IQR1correlationBACKGROUND:Prolongedscientificdiscouragingresearchersearliermeanhigherh-indexacademicopportunitiesalsoassessedcorrelationsspeedimpactfactorsMETHODS:overallindexesdisciplineadditionoriginalpublishedhighest-rankingvarioussubspecialtieslisted2018JournalCitationReportassessingintervalsintervalanalyzedRESULTS:total210foundsignificantlyaffectsubmission-to-acceptancetimes<005Wilcoxontestmediansubmission-to-publication297weeks123522days36respectivelyCONCLUSIONS:significantlagnonplastic-surgerypositivesubmission-tonegativeSpearmanlast14yearsremainedslowNeedSpeed:InvestigatingPublicationTimesImpactFactorsPlasticSurgeryJournals

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