Journal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association (Apr 2024)

Bibliometric Analysis of Librarian Involvement in Systematic Reviews at the University of Alberta

  • Janice Y. Kung,
  • Megan R. Kennedy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.29173/jchla29696
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45, no. 1

Abstract

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Introduction - It is well documented that librarian involvement in systematic reviews generally increases quality of reporting and the review overall. We used bibliometric analysis methods to analyze the level of librarian involvement in systematic reviews conducted at the University of Alberta (U of A). Methods - Using Web of Science (WoS), we searched for systematic reviews completed in the years 2016-2020 with a U of A co-author. Systematic reviews identified through WoS were screened in two phases: 1) Exclusion of duplicates, protocols, other types or reviews, and systematic review methodology literature to leave true systematic review publications, 2) Screening for level of librarian involvement (acknowledgement, co-author, or no involvement). Results - 640 reviews were analyzed for the following categories: 1) librarian named as a co-author; 2) librarian named in the acknowledgements section; 3) librarian mentioned in the body of the manuscript; 4) no librarian involvement. We identified 152 reviews who named a librarian as a co-author on the paper, 125 reviews named a librarian in the acknowledgements section, and 268 reviews mentioned a librarian in the body of the review. Conclusion - There is a great deal of variation in how the work of librarians is reflected in systematic reviews. This was particularly apparent in reviews where a librarian was mentioned in the body of the review but they were not named as an author or formally acknowledged. Continuing to educate researchers about the work of librarians is crucial to fully represent the value librarians bring to systematic reviews.