Evolution of Scientific Production on Phlebitis Secondary to Vascular Access: A 71-Year Bibliometric Analysis

Author:

Torné-Ruiz Alba12ORCID,García-Expósito Judith13ORCID,Bonet Aida1ORCID,Masot Olga145ORCID,Roca Judith145ORCID,Selva-Pareja Laia145

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nursing and Physiotherapy, University of Lleida, 25199 Lleida, Spain

2. Hospital Fundació Althaia, Xarxa Assistencial Universitària de Manresa, 08243 Manresa, Spain

3. Group Preving (Vitaly), 03003 Alicante, Spain

4. Health Care Research Group (GRECS), Biomedical Research Institute of Lleida, 25198 Lleida, Spain

5. Health Education, Nursing, Sustainability and Innovation Research Group (GREISI), 25199 Lleida, Spain

Abstract

Phlebitis secondary to vascular access is one of the most frequent complications in hospital care. This study aims to evaluate the scientific activity related to this complication through a bibliometric analysis. The search was performed on a single day, 23 January 2023, to ensure the inclusion of all articles and to avoid bias caused by the daily updates of the open access database. The data were recovered from Web of Science. The sample comprised a total of 1596 publications that met the inclusion criteria. The United States was the country with the largest number of publications, citations, and international cooperation with respect to phlebitis and vascular access. The most important author was Rickard CM. Of all the publications selected, a total of 1586 (99.37%) were original articles. The highest number of articles on the subject was recorded in 2021, and the most common research areas were General Internal Medicine and Nursing. The analysis of the clusters (KeyWords Plus and Author keywords) and co-occurrences enabled identification of areas of interest and their possible development. These areas included the prevention, risk, and associated complications of catheter-associated phlebitis. Other aspects that are a priori relevant, such as assessment and treatment, were found to be little investigated. While research on this subject is increasing internationally, more collaborations are still required between researchers, as well as new approaches related to the management of catheter-associated phlebitis. The dimensions that should continue to be considered in new research, according to the findings of this review, are instruments for phlebitis assessment and their validation, and the treatments to follow in the case of established phlebitis. For this reason, the bibliometric information presented is key for new or consolidated researchers in the field, especially because of its practical and clinical implications for patient safety.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Nursing

Reference52 articles.

1. Devices and dressings to secure peripheral venous catheters: A Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis;Marsh;Int. J. Nurs. Stud.,2017

2. Peripheral venous catheters: An under-evaluated problem;Zingg;Int. J. Antimicrob. Agents,2009

3. Evidence of learning on the insertion and care of peripheral venous catheters in nursing students: A mixed study;Reguant;Nurse Educ. Today,2021

4. Incidence, severity and risk factors of peripheral intravenous cannula-induced complications: An observational prospective study;Simin;J. Clin. Nurs.,2019

5. Incidence and factors associated with development of phlebitis: Results of a pilot study cohort;Parra;Rev. Enferm. Referência,2015

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