CorrespondenceHow international are the editorial boards of leading psychiatry journals?
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International representation in psychiatric literature
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Cited by (66)
Forty years of editorship of psychiatry research
2019, Psychiatry ResearchCitation Excerpt :Dr. S. Saxena of WHO organized a meeting in Geneva to bring together the Editors of psychiatric journals to discuss the limited publication of research done in developing countries. Saxena et al. (2003) emphasized the lack of fully international membership of the editorial board of psychiatric journals in a letter to Lancet. Participants in the 2003 Geneva meeting included myself and the editors of journals from the US, England, Europe and India among others, including one open access journal (a relatively new trend at the time).
The Lancet Psychiatry Editorial Board Development Programme
2015, The Lancet PsychiatryThe wealth of nations and the dissemination of cardiovascular research
2013, International Journal of CardiologyCitation Excerpt :Economic indicators have been correlated with scientific productivity with a gap between poor and wealthy nations [1–3]. Although the mechanism for this observation remains unknown, it has been postulated that much of this gap may be a result of less research infrastructure, education, and training to perform high-quality work in poor nations [1,4]. A potential bias in the dissemination of research from investigators in poor nations also has been suggested, but there is little empirical evidence to support it [4–7].
Editorial bias in scientific publications
2011, Neurologia