This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
News

UB Neurosurgery ranks seventh
in North America in academic impact

  • “It is very satisfying to see us ranked above the traditional academic strongholds like Harvard, Yale, Columbia and Johns Hopkins.”

    L. Nelson Hopkins
    Professor and Chair, UB Neurosurgery
By LOIS BAKER
Published: September 20, 2010

The Department of Neurosurgery is ranked seventh in North America in terms of academic impact, based on an analysis of 25 neurosurgery and neurology journals published in the September issue of the Journal of Neurosurgery.

The report is the first systemic ranking of scholarly activity in neurosurgery.

The analysis of the academic impact of 99 university or hospital neurosurgery departments with residency programs that participate in the U.S. National Residency Matching program, and 14 comparable Canadian programs, was conducted by Francisco Ponce from Barrow Neurological Institute, St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix and Andres Lozano from the University of Toronto.

The full ranking and a description of the rankings methodology is available on the Journal of Neurosurgery’s website.

“The analysis ranks the UB Department of Neurosurgery in the top 10 academic departments in North America.  This recognition represents substantial achievement, and reaffirms that the department is an outstanding academic enterprise,” said Michael Cain, dean of the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, in congratulating the UB department on the rating.

“It is very satisfying to see us ranked above the traditional academic strongholds like Harvard, Yale, Columbia and Johns Hopkins,” added L Nelson “Nick” Hopkins, professor and chair of UB Neurosurgery. “UB Neurosurgery is becoming a ‘go to’ place, especially for vascular neurosurgery.”

The top six neurosurgery departments are the University of Pittsburgh, University of Virginia, UC-San Francisco, University of Toronto, Mayo Clinic-Rochester and UCLA.

Hopkins pointed out that the neurosurgery departments with more publications than UB have two-to-three times as many neurosurgeons as UB, along with many more basic scientists.

“Our department’s academic productivity has exploded in the last decade,” he said. “We’ve produced about 50 publications per year in the past two years, so our ranking will continue to climb.” The department published 218 articles in peer-review journals during the past five years, including, but not restricted to, the journals analyzed in the Ponce-Lozano article.

The study authors note that the rankings likely will be of interest to prospective residents, faculty and administrators, as well as rating bodies and charitable institutions.