Abstract:
A scientometric analysis was conducted to map out the research productivity and scholarly impact of researchers at
the Institute of Traditional Medicine (ITM) in Tanzania for the period between 1980 and 2013. The study analyzed
the growth of the ITM’s scholarly literature; ascertained the year-wise distribution of publications; determined the
authorship pattern and degree of collaboration; and analyzed individual scholars’ productivity and impact. Data were
obtained using the Publish or Perish software that employs Google Scholar to retrieve scholars’ publications and
their citations. The findings show that there were a total of 381 publications published between 1980 and 2013,
giving an average of 11.2 publications per year. The year 2012 had the most (12.3%) number of publications
followed by 2007 and 2008 with 8.9% of all publications each. A vast majority (91.9%) of the publications were
multiple-authored with 35.2% of the publications having six or more authors. The degree of collaboration was 0.92
and the ratio between team work and single author work was 11:1. Overall, M.J. Moshi and Z.H. Mbwambo were
the top ranking scholars followed by R.L.A. Mahunnah and F.C. Uiso. All ITM researchers showed variation in their
performance as no single scholar maintained the same rank in all nine metrics. The study findings call for scholars to
recognize the importance of publishing in visible journals in order to receive large citation counts. Institutions are
urged to employ scientometrics in evaluating the research performance of their scholars since such techniques take into account a combination of several measures.