posted on 2025-05-09, 01:29authored byMieke L. van Driel, Parker MaginParker Magin, Chris B. Del Mar
Background: In 2008, Australian Family Physician (AFP) was accepted on the list of journals listed in Science Citation Index Expanded and, thus, will generate an impact factor over the next 2 years. Impact factor is important to authors from research and academic backgrounds and will make AFP an increasingly attractive journal in which to publish. Aim: To describe the impact factor, its method of calculation, and its flaws. Discussion: Impact factor is the number of a journal's cited research papers divided by the total number of citable papers it has published. It is distorted by several different factors: sub-discipline, region, basic versus applied research, and whether the journal editor deliberately tries to strategically increase their impact factor. Conclusion: Impact factor is an oversimplified single measure of 'impact', which may underestimate the contribution of the AFP to society. However, no accepted alternative metric currently exists.
History
Journal title
Australian Family Physician
Volume
37
Issue
9
Pagination
770-773
Publisher
Royal Australian College of General Practitioners
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
Faculty of Health
School
School of Medicine and Public Health
Rights statement
Copyright to Australian Family Physician. Reproduced with permission. Permission to reproduce must be sought from the publisher, The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners.