Enhancing the h index for the objective assessment of healthcare researcher performance and impact

Author:

Patel Vanash M1,Ashrafian Hutan1,Bornmann Lutz2,Mutz RÜDiger3,Makanjuola Jonathan1,Skapinakis Petros1,Darzi Ara4,Athanasiou Thanos1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, St Mary's Hospital, London W2 1NY, UK

2. Max Planck Society, Munich 80539, Germany

3. Department of Social Psycology and Research on Higher Education, ETH Zurich, Muehlegasse 21, Zurich 8001, Switzerland

4. Imperial College London, South Kensington Campus, London SW7 2AZ, UK

Abstract

Summary Objective To investigate whether the h index (a bibliometric tool which is increasingly used to assess and appraise an individual's research performance) could be improved to better measure the academic performance and citation profile for individual healthcare researchers. Design Cohort study. Setting Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, UK. Participants Publication lists from 1 January 2000 until 31 December 2009 for 501 academic healthcare researchers from the Faculty of Medicine. Main outcome measures The h index for each researcher was calculated over a nine-year period. The citation count for each researcher was differentiated into high ( h2 upper), core ( h2 centre) and low ( h2 lower) visibility areas. Segmented regression model (sRM) was used to statistically estimate number of high visibility publications (sRM value). Validity of the h index and other proposed adjuncts were analysed against academic rank and conventional bibliometric indicators. Results Construct validity was demonstrated for h index, h2 upper, h2 centre, h2 lower and sRM value (all P < 0.05). Convergent validity of the h index and sRM value was shown by significant correlations with total number of publications ( r =0.89 and 0.86 respectively, P<0.05) and total number of citations ( r = 0.96 and 0.65, respectively, P<0.05). Significant differences in h index and sRM value existed between non-physician and physician researchers ( P < 0.05). Conclusions This study supports the construct validity of the h index as a measure of healthcare researcher academic rank. It also identifies the assessment value of our developed indices of h2 upper, h2 centre, h2 lower and sRM. These can be applied in combination with the h index to provide additional objective evidence to appraise the performance and impact of an academic healthcare researcher.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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