Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics (Nov 2021)

Tracking the progress in COVID-19 and vaccine safety research – a comprehensive bibliometric analysis of publications indexed in Scopus database

  • Tosin Yinka Akintunde,
  • Shaojun Chen,
  • Taha Hussein Musa,
  • Felix Oluseyi Amoo,
  • Adekunle Adedeji,
  • Elhakim Ibrahim,
  • Angwi Enow Tassang,
  • Idriss Hussein Musa,
  • Hassan Hussein Musa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2021.1969851
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 11
pp. 3887 – 3897

Abstract

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Introduction COVID-19 pandemic public health emergency is one of the worse disease outbreaks in the history of infectious disease. The consequence has resulted in over 4 million deaths globally. Therefore, a more in-depth understanding of the dynamics of the disease, vaccine development, and safety has become crucial for the disease eradication. Objective The study adopted bibliometric analysis to identify the global contribution in COVID-19 and Vaccine Safety and analyzed the current status, development, and research hotspots to reference for future research directions. Methods Studies published between January 1, 2019 and July 11, 2021 were retrieved from the Scopus database. Data analysis and visualization were conducted using VOSviewer ver 1.6.6, Bibliometrix app. (Using R). Results A total of 1827 publications with 12.14 average citations per document were identified. These publications were published in 796 journals by 10,243 authors (with 5.61 authors per document) from 80 countries/regions. About 33.75% of the researches were from the developed countries. The USA, China, and India were top contributors for scientific research on COVID-19 and vaccine safety. The “Vaccine” is the most productive journal with 58 articles. Li Y, NA NA, and Liu X were the top three prolific authors. Furthermore, “Human,” “Coronavirus disease 2019,” and “Drug safety,” were the most common frontier topics. Conclusions Our analysis highlights the characteristics of the most influential articles on COVID-19 related to vaccine safety. The findings provided valuable insight into the scientific research progress in this domain and suggest scaling-up research and information dissemination on COVID-19 and vaccine safety.

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