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. 1996 Jul;53(7):433–438. doi: 10.1136/oem.53.7.433

A bibliometric study of the trend in articles related to epidemiology published in occupational health journals.

K Takahashi 1, T Hoshuyama 1, K Ikegami 1, T Itoh 1, T Higashi 1, T Okubo 1
PMCID: PMC1128509  PMID: 8704865

Abstract

OBJECTIVES--To study the role assumed by epidemiology in occupational health literature and characterise its change over the years. METHODS--A bibliometric study was conducted with a MEDLINE search to evaluate 9024 articles published in eight representative occupational health journals for the period 1980-93. Articles related to epidemiology were found by descriptors indexed in the articles and their numbers and proportions among all published articles was tabulated for the study period. RESULTS--The proportion of source items indexed by epidemiology as a descriptor increased over threefold from 7.9% (42/534) in 1980 to over 25% after 1990. Epidemiology was indexed most frequently as a subheading associated with other descriptors-for example, occupational diseases-epidemiology. Cohort studies had the largest increase in the descriptors that indicated epidemiological type of studies during the period studied. CONCLUSION--Epidemiology is assuming increasing importance in occupational health literature. This was shown quantitatively and qualitatively by the use of descriptors in the MEDLINE database.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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