Observational Analysis of Korean Society of Spine Surgery Annual Congress: (2001-05) Free Paper: From Presentation to Publication.
10.4184/jkss.2011.18.1.19
- Author:
Ju O KIM
1
;
Byung Wan CHOI
;
Ju Han KIM
;
Kyung Jin SONG
;
Kwang Bok LEE
Author Information
1. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Gwang-Ju Veterans Hospital, Gwangju, Korea.
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Korean Society of Spine Surgery congress;
Presentation;
Publication
- MeSH:
Congenital Abnormalities;
Publications;
Spine
- From:Journal of Korean Society of Spine Surgery
2011;18(1):19-23
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
STUDY DESIGN: A review of all presentations at the Korean Society of Spine Surgery(KSSS) congress from 2001 to 2005. OBJECTIVES: To determine the presentation to publication rate in peer-reviewed journals of abstracts presented at the KSSS congress and evaluate the consistency between the presented abstract and published full-text counterpart. SUMMARY OF LITERATURE REVIEW: The rate of publication for presentation at international meetings has been determined but there has been no study for the KSSS. MATERIAL AND METHODS: This study reviewed all podium presentations of the past KSSS Spring and Fall meetings from 2001 to 2005. A computer search for each abstract was performed. The final published journal, time to publication and publication rate were evaluated according to subspecialty. The published full-text article was compared with the original abstract and evaluated for consistency with respect to the author, material and method, and result. RESULTS: A total of 288 free-papers were identified, of which 167 of them were published as full-text articles. The mean time to publication was 12.15 months. The publication rates according to the subspecialty were basic 67%, lumbar 68%, cervical 64%, deformity 50%, trauma 53%, minimal 14% and others 51%, respectively. CONCLUSION: The presentation to publication rate of the Korean society of spine surgery podium presentations was lower than other international meetings but the articles showed a high consistency rate.