Examining the Representation of South Asian Populations in Substance Addiction Research: A Bibliometric Analysis From 2014 to 2024
Saswat Sahoo, Khushi Singh, Teresa Fong, Asmaa Basonbul

TL;DR
This paper analyzes 10 years of research on substance addiction in South Asian populations, finding significant growth but a heavy focus on India.
Contribution
The study provides a bibliometric analysis of substance addiction research in South Asian populations from 2014 to 2024, highlighting regional disparities.
Findings
Annual publications on South Asian substance addiction increased significantly from 124 in 2014 to 164 in 2024.
India accounted for 66.1% of all studies, with only India showing significant growth in research output.
Six of the top 10 publishing countries were non-South Asian, indicating limited regional research leadership.
Abstract
Substance addiction is a major global health concern, yet South Asian populations remain underrepresented in research, limiting understanding of how addiction affects these communities. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate substance addiction research productivity in South Asian populations through a 10-year bibliometric analysis (2014-2024). A systematic PubMed search identified 1,320 research publications that met the inclusion criteria. Extracted data included annual publication counts, article type, five-year journal impact factor (JIF), citation counts, and country of publication. South Asian populations were examined both as a whole and as specific subgroups from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. Annual publications showed a significant upward trend (slope=3.73 studies/year, p=0.016), increasing from 124 in 2014 to 164 in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · Opioid Use Disorder Treatment · Mental Health Treatment and Access
