Continued publications by health science PhDs, 5 yrs post PhD-defence

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Continued publications by health science PhDs, 5 yrs post PhD-defence. / Wildgaard, Lorna Elizabeth; Wildgaard, Kim.

I: Research Evaluation, Bind 27, Nr. 4, 08.10.2018, s. 347-357.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Wildgaard, LE & Wildgaard, K 2018, 'Continued publications by health science PhDs, 5 yrs post PhD-defence', Research Evaluation, bind 27, nr. 4, s. 347-357. https://doi.org/10.1093/reseval/rvy027

APA

Wildgaard, L. E., & Wildgaard, K. (2018). Continued publications by health science PhDs, 5 yrs post PhD-defence. Research Evaluation, 27(4), 347-357. https://doi.org/10.1093/reseval/rvy027

Vancouver

Wildgaard LE, Wildgaard K. Continued publications by health science PhDs, 5 yrs post PhD-defence. Research Evaluation. 2018 okt. 8;27(4):347-357. https://doi.org/10.1093/reseval/rvy027

Author

Wildgaard, Lorna Elizabeth ; Wildgaard, Kim. / Continued publications by health science PhDs, 5 yrs post PhD-defence. I: Research Evaluation. 2018 ; Bind 27, Nr. 4. s. 347-357.

Bibtex

@article{1166f2d729cd4be7b6a3df1c54cb184d,
title = "Continued publications by health science PhDs, 5 yrs post PhD-defence",
abstract = "There is an increased focus on the outcomes of Health Science PhD-education, particularly if PhD-graduates remain active in research. There is a gap in our knowledge about the extent the investment in Health Science PhDs is moving science forward and no definition of expected investment return from PhD exists. We explore the research production of Danish Health Science PhDs, 5–9 years post PhD-defence, to find the fraction of PhD-graduates that are still actively publishing internationally. Secondary endpoints include analyses of the number of publications over time, identification of consecutive publishers, gender differences, and differences between medical doctors with a PhD (MDs) and non-MDs with a PhD. PhD-theses defended in 2005 and 2006 were identified and collected using the Danish National Research Database and via the four Danish universities offering Health Science PhD-programmes. Publication data were collected from Years 5 to 9 post PhD-defence to allow publications produced during the PhD-period to be washed out. Total 532 unique PhD-graduates (300 female and 232 male) produced a total of 4,530 PubMed-indexed publications. Results show zero publishers represented 31.2% (n = 166), while 25.8% (n = 137) of PhD-graduates published 10 or more publications during the 5-year observation window. Overall publication count increased from post PhD Years 5–9 with 68% (from 720 to 1,049). Number of publications did not differ between MDs and non-MDs. Our results evidence that not all graduates continue in research. Consequently, we need to identify early factors that make graduates remain in research, to identify future PhD-candidates that will continue publication post PhD.",
author = "Wildgaard, {Lorna Elizabeth} and Kim Wildgaard",
year = "2018",
month = oct,
day = "8",
doi = "10.1093/reseval/rvy027",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "347--357",
journal = "Research Evaluation",
issn = "0958-2029",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Continued publications by health science PhDs, 5 yrs post PhD-defence

AU - Wildgaard, Lorna Elizabeth

AU - Wildgaard, Kim

PY - 2018/10/8

Y1 - 2018/10/8

N2 - There is an increased focus on the outcomes of Health Science PhD-education, particularly if PhD-graduates remain active in research. There is a gap in our knowledge about the extent the investment in Health Science PhDs is moving science forward and no definition of expected investment return from PhD exists. We explore the research production of Danish Health Science PhDs, 5–9 years post PhD-defence, to find the fraction of PhD-graduates that are still actively publishing internationally. Secondary endpoints include analyses of the number of publications over time, identification of consecutive publishers, gender differences, and differences between medical doctors with a PhD (MDs) and non-MDs with a PhD. PhD-theses defended in 2005 and 2006 were identified and collected using the Danish National Research Database and via the four Danish universities offering Health Science PhD-programmes. Publication data were collected from Years 5 to 9 post PhD-defence to allow publications produced during the PhD-period to be washed out. Total 532 unique PhD-graduates (300 female and 232 male) produced a total of 4,530 PubMed-indexed publications. Results show zero publishers represented 31.2% (n = 166), while 25.8% (n = 137) of PhD-graduates published 10 or more publications during the 5-year observation window. Overall publication count increased from post PhD Years 5–9 with 68% (from 720 to 1,049). Number of publications did not differ between MDs and non-MDs. Our results evidence that not all graduates continue in research. Consequently, we need to identify early factors that make graduates remain in research, to identify future PhD-candidates that will continue publication post PhD.

AB - There is an increased focus on the outcomes of Health Science PhD-education, particularly if PhD-graduates remain active in research. There is a gap in our knowledge about the extent the investment in Health Science PhDs is moving science forward and no definition of expected investment return from PhD exists. We explore the research production of Danish Health Science PhDs, 5–9 years post PhD-defence, to find the fraction of PhD-graduates that are still actively publishing internationally. Secondary endpoints include analyses of the number of publications over time, identification of consecutive publishers, gender differences, and differences between medical doctors with a PhD (MDs) and non-MDs with a PhD. PhD-theses defended in 2005 and 2006 were identified and collected using the Danish National Research Database and via the four Danish universities offering Health Science PhD-programmes. Publication data were collected from Years 5 to 9 post PhD-defence to allow publications produced during the PhD-period to be washed out. Total 532 unique PhD-graduates (300 female and 232 male) produced a total of 4,530 PubMed-indexed publications. Results show zero publishers represented 31.2% (n = 166), while 25.8% (n = 137) of PhD-graduates published 10 or more publications during the 5-year observation window. Overall publication count increased from post PhD Years 5–9 with 68% (from 720 to 1,049). Number of publications did not differ between MDs and non-MDs. Our results evidence that not all graduates continue in research. Consequently, we need to identify early factors that make graduates remain in research, to identify future PhD-candidates that will continue publication post PhD.

U2 - 10.1093/reseval/rvy027

DO - 10.1093/reseval/rvy027

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 347

EP - 357

JO - Research Evaluation

JF - Research Evaluation

SN - 0958-2029

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 203528211