Dp. Carson et Jm. Eagles, Disparities in the geographical distribution of authorship between invitedand peer reviewed papers, SCOT MED J, 44(5), 1999, pp. 149-151
Fifty issues of the British Medical Journal (BMJ), The Lancet, The British
Journal of Psychiatry and Psychological Medicine were scrutinised. Papers w
ere designated as invited or peer reviewed and the geographical location of
the first author was recorded. For UK-based authors, the latitude and long
itude of the host institution was noted and was allocated to one of the UK
regions. Of invited papers 805 of 1227 (66%) were by UK-based authors compa
red with 1442 of 2896 peer reviewed papers (50%), odds ratio 1.92 (95% CI 1
.67 - 2.21) with a similar pattern prevailing in each of the four journals.
Within the UK authorships of invited versus peer reviewed papers showed a
preponderance of invited authors based in southeast England, odds ratio 1.3
0 (95% CI 1.09 - 1.56). For individual Journals, the Lancet and the British
Journal of Psychiatry showed fewer regional disparities in authorship than
the BMJ and Psychological Medicine. These disparities may lead to national
ism and parochiality in the content of invited papers. Journal editors may
wish to review selection practices for authorship of invited papers.