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PHYS THER
Vol. 83, No. 2, February 2003, pp. 123-131

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Research Reports

A Quantitative Analysis of Research Publications in Physical Therapy Journals

Patricia A Miller, K Ann McKibbon and R Brian Haynes

PA Miller, PT, MHSc, is Assistant Clinical Professor, School of Rehabilitation Science, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, and Chief of Physiotherapy Practice, Hamilton Health Sciences, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. When this article was written, she was a graduate student in the Health Research Methodology Program at McMaster University. Address all correspondence to Ms Miller at 5 Undercliffe Ave, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8P 3G9 (pmiller{at}mcmaster.ca)
KA McKibbon, BSc, MLS, is currently on leave from the Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University, for PhD studies at the Centre for Biomedical Informatics, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa
RB Haynes, MD, PhD, is Professor of Clinical Epidemiology and Medicine, McMaster University. He is Editor of ACP Journal Club

Background and Purpose. Many physical therapists depend on their professional journals for high-quality evidence. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the rigor of research and review articles in 4 national physical therapy journals. Subjects and Methods. All articles in 6 consecutive issues of the Australian Journal of Physiotherapy, Physical Therapy, Physiotherapy, and Physiotherapy Canada, published between January 2000 and June 2001 (N=179), were reviewed. One trained reviewer identified the type and purpose of each article and assessed the rigor of treatment and review articles according to explicit criteria. Results. The majority of articles reviewed were original studies (56%). The majority of the research articles that dealt with human health care (66%) addressed topics that were not directly applicable to the provision of patient care such as measurement topics and studies on subjects without identified pathologies or impairments. Of the 179 journal articles, 19 met the standards for rigor (11%). The majority of these articles dealt with treatment. The pass rate per journal was as follows: Australian Journal of Physiotherapy, 10% (4/42); Physical Therapy, 15% (7/47); Physiotherapy, 12% (4/34); and Physiotherapy Canada, 7% (4/56). Discussion and Conclusion. Because such a small percentage of articles in these professional journals were identified as having direct application to patient care, physical therapists should attempt to access other sources of information to find additional high-quality evidence. A larger sample with a greater number of issues per journal may have yielded different results and indicated different trends, and further research appears to be warranted.

Key Words: Clinical research • Evidence-based practice • Publications and audiovisual materials


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