Artículo

The Effect of the COVID Pandemic on Clinical Psychology Research: A Bibliometric Analysis

Resumen

The present bibliometric analysis used traditional measures and network science techniques to examine how the COVID-19 pandemic influenced research in Clinical Psychology. Publication records from the Web of Science (WoS) were obtained for journal articles published prior to (2015 and 2018), during (2020), and at the end of the pandemic (2022) for the search terms “men and mental health” and “women and mental health”. Network analyses of author-provided keywords showed that COVID-19 co-occurred with fear, anxiety, depression, and stress for both men and women in 2020. In 2022, COVID-19 co-occurred with topics related to world-wide lockdowns (e.g., alcohol use, substance use, intimate partner violence, loneliness, physical activity), and to more fundamental topics in Clinical Psychology (e.g., eating disorders and post-traumatic stress disorder). Although the COVID pandemic was associated with several changes in the research topics that were examined in Clinical Psychology, pre-existing disparities in the amount of mental health research on men compared to women did not appear to increase (in contrast to increases associated with COVID in pre-existing gender disparities observed in other areas of society).
Anders, Jordan (59187820600); Vitevitch, Michael S. (6701776485)
The Effect of the COVID Pandemic on Clinical Psychology Research: A Bibliometric Analysis
2024
10.3390/bs14060463
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85196775272&doi=10.3390%2fbs14060463&partnerID=40&md5=4ad677a0229d4b9753beb19c2e511cb1
Spoken Language Laboratory, Department of Speech Language Hearing: Sciences & Disorders, Dole Human Development Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, 66045, KS, United States
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
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