Objectives
To analyze the scientific production of primary care research in Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) countries from 1980 to 2024 and to provide recommendations for improvement.
Design
Observational, machine learning-based bibliometric study.
Data sources
Review and research articles indexed in the Web of Science database.
Selection of studies
Bibliometric analysis was performed on data from 33 LAC countries, retrieved from the Web of Science as of April 15, 2024.
Data extraction
For each record, data on the journal, year of publication, article title, abstract, keywords, authors, affiliations, countries, cited sources, cited first authors, and references were extracted for bibliometric and text mining analyses. We used a form of machine learning, Latent Dirichlet Allocation topic modeling, to identify the key topics of research.
Results
LAC countries contributed only 0.83% of the global literature on primary health care, with just 0.98% of this output comprising research and review articles. The majority of research originated from Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, and Chile, while many LAC countries produced little to no output. LAC countries frequently collaborated with the United States, Spain, Canada, and England. Research topics in the region predominantly focused on cancer, obesity, COVID-19, nutritional disorders, and food safety within the primary health care field.
Conclusions
The findings highlight significant potential for growth in primary health care research in LAC countries. Strengthening individual and collective strategies to build research capacity and fostering collaborations with global academic networks are recommended to enhance research output and impact.
