Background: Toxicology in Malaysia has experienced rapid
development and made great progress in education and research in conjunction
with economic development in Malaysia over the past two decades.
Objectives: The main objectives of this study were to analyse the research originating
from Malaysia and published in toxicology journals and to examine the
authorship pattern and the citations retrieved from the Scopus database.
Methods: Data from 1 January 2003 till 31 December 2012 were searched for
documents with specific words in the toxicology field as a ‘source title’ and
Malaysia as an affiliation country. Research productivity was evaluated based
on a methodology we developed and used in other bibliometric studies by
analysing: (a) total and trends of contributions in toxicology fields between
2003 and 2012; (b) Malaysian authorship pattern and productivity; (c)
collaboration patterns; (d) journals in which Malaysian researchers publish;
(e) the classification of journals to Institute for Scientific Information
(ISI) or non-ISI; (f) impact factors (IFs) of all publications; and (g)
citations received by the publications.
Results: In total, 290 documents were retrieved from 55 international
peer-reviewed toxicology journals. The quantity of publication increased by
around 10-fold from 2003 to 2012. The h-index of the retrieved documents was
20. Of the 55 journal titles, 42 (76.4%) have their IF listed in the journal
citation reports 2012. Forty-two documents (14.5%) were published in journals
that had no official IF. The total number of citations, at the time of
manuscript writing (5 August 2013), was 1707, with a median (interquartile
range) of 3 (0–7). Malaysia collaborated mostly with countries in the
Asia-Pacific regions (18.3%), especially India and Japan, followed by the Middle
East and Africa (10.0%), especially Palestine and Yemen.
Conclusion: The present data show a promising rise and a good start for
toxicology research activity in Malaysia. The sharing of relevant research
questions by developed and developing countries can lead to research
opportunities in the field of toxicology.