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Progress and prospects of medical education research in Asian Countries

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dc.contributor.author Meo, Sultan Ayoub
dc.contributor.author Sattar, Kamran
dc.contributor.author ullah, Chaudhary Habib
dc.contributor.author Alnassar, Sami
dc.contributor.author Hajjar, Waseem
dc.contributor.author Usmani, Adnan Mahmood
dc.date.accessioned 2019-11-14T09:53:57Z
dc.date.available 2019-11-14T09:53:57Z
dc.date.issued 2019-01-01
dc.identifier.uri http://142.54.178.187:9060/xmlui/handle/123456789/1286
dc.description.abstract Background and Objectives: Medical education has a profound impact on health care system. Progress in achieving medical education research goals varies over time and across countries. This study aimed to investigate the medical education research ambience in Asia during the period 1965-2015. Methods: We investigated the bibliometric indicators of 49 Asian states in medical education research from 1965-2015. The data about Asian countries, their per capita GDP, expenditure on R&D, universities and indexed scientific journals were collected. We recorded medical education related research documents published in Institute of Scientific Information (ISI) Web of Science, Thomson Reuters during the period 1965-2015. Results: Asian countries collectively published 12721799 research articles, among them 40628 (0.31%) publications were in medical education. China contributed total of 3351565 articles among which 5414 (0.16%) research articles were in medical education; India added 1328725 papers with 4563 (0.34%) in medical education; Japan produced 3080257 papers with 4199 (0.13%) in medical education; Israel 561531 with 3848 (0.68%) in medical education; and lastly, Georgia contributed a total of 296532 research articles with 2565 (0.86%) in medical education. Conclusions: In Asia, the top five countries in medical education research are China, Georgia, Israel, Japan and India. The countries at low ranking are Yemen, Palestine, Myanmar, Kazakhstan, Syria and Armenia. In Asian states, the overall performance in medical science research needs policies to enhance its impact globally. Medical universities should offer research programs for learning and understanding the challengeable issues in medical education research en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Pak J Med Sci en_US
dc.subject Medical and Health Sciences en_US
dc.subject Medical education en_US
dc.subject Indexed journal en_US
dc.subject Research en_US
dc.title Progress and prospects of medical education research in Asian Countries en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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