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Content and bibliometric analyses of the Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy
Authors:Corey B Simon  Rogelio A Coronado  Wendy A Wurtzel  Daniel L Riddle  Steven Z George
Institution:1. Department of Physical TherapyCollege of Public Health and Health Professions, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA;2. LifeStyle Physical Therapy and Balance CenterChicago, IL, USA;3. Department of Physical Therapy and Orthopaedic SurgeryMedical College of Virginia Campus, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA
Abstract:Background:

Article characteristics and trends have been elucidated for other physical therapy-focused journals using content and bibliometric analysis. These findings are important for assessing the current state of a journal and for guiding future publication of research. To date, these analyses have not been performed for the Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy (JMMT).

Objective:

To describe content and trends for articles published in JMMT over a 20-year period (1993–2012).

Methods:

Journal articles were coded using previously-established domains (article type, participant type, research design, study purpose, and clinical condition). Total publications and proportion of publications based on domain were described. Articles specific to manual therapy intervention were examined and compared to data from other physical therapy-focused journals. Impact by citation and author was examined using bibliometric software.

Results:

Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy was found to have a recent acceleration in the number of articles published annually. Over time, topical reviews have decreased in favor of research reports. However, rigorous study designs have represented only a small portion of total journal content, and case reports have maintained a consistent publication presence. Manual therapy intervention articles in JMMT are predominantly case designs, however are similar in characteristics to manual therapy intervention articles published in other physical therapy-focused journals. For JMMT articles overall and manual therapy intervention articles across journals, young to middle-aged symptomatic adults with low back and/or neck pain were the most common study participants.

Discussion:

Increases in the number of papers and a move toward research reports were observed in JMMT over the 20-year period. Considerations for the future were outlined, including the publication of articles with more rigorous research designs. Manual therapy research for adolescents and older adults and for upper and lower extremity conditions should also be considered as priorities for the future.

Keywords:Content  Bibliometric  Analysis  Trends  Manual therapy  Intervention
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