Research, Reading, and Publication Habits of Nurses and Nursing Students Applied to Impact Journals: International Multicentre Study.
María Begoña Sánchez-GómezGonzalo Duarte-ClimentsJuan Gómez SalgadoMaría Elena González-PachecoMaría Elisa de Castro-PerazaMaría Mercedes Novo-MuñozJosé Ángel Rodríguez-GómezJosé Ramón Martínez RieraRafaella Pessoa MoreiraMaria do Rosário MartinsPaloma Echevarría-PérezAna Isabel Bonilla-CaleroPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2023)
Publishing in JCR and SJR journals has become crucial for curricular development. Results from nursing investigations "compete" for publication in journals which are not specific to the field of care, affecting the academic development of these investigators. This phenomenon may lead to an ongoing adverse effect on nursing researchers and academics engaged in research in nursing care. The aim of this study was to evaluate habits regarding scientific literature consulting, the transfer of published material, and the citation of nursing investigations. A cross-sectional descriptive study by means of questionnaires was carried out, focusing on both Spanish and Portuguese nurses. The findings of the study reveal the following reasons for reading the scientific literature: that the language was understood; for learning and applying what was learnt; that the journal was of open access; for elaborating protocols and work procedures; and that the journal was indexed in scientific databases and in nursing databases. The reasons for reading, using, and publishing in journals were related to knowledge of the language and the associated usefulness of learning and applying knowledge. Creating a specific index of research publications in nursing will have a positive effect on the scientific production of caring methodologies.