News Release

Developed and developing: An outdated classification for countries?

Peer-Reviewed Publication

PLOS

Developed and Developing: An Outdated Classification for Countries?

image: 'Co-authorship country networks formed to address the Ebola and Zika epidemics.' The top map represents the Ebola co-authorship network, 2015. The bottom map represents the Zika co-authorship network, 2016. Each node represents one country, two countries were considered connected when citizens shared authorship of a paper and the thickness of a link indicates the frequency of collaboration between two nodes. Larger sizes and warmer colors indicate a high betweenness centrality. Country colors are an indicative of their position in the innovation ranking proposed in this study. Darker blue colors indicate innovative countries. view more 

Credit: Morel, et al. (2018)

Countries have traditionally been divided into two broad categories according to their capacity to innovate. Now, researchers reporting in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases say these categories are overly simplistic and leave out the key roles that a group of Innovative Developing Countries (IDCs) play in the public health arena.

In 2005, IDCs were defined as countries whose patents filed per GDP per capita was in the top 25 even though they were not considered high income economies by the World Bank. In this new article, Alexandre Vasconcellos, of Brazil's National Institute of Industrial Property, along with Bruna Fonseca and Carlos Morel from Fiocruz, refine this metric by using international patent applications (PCT), which creates an updated list of IDCs. The researchers further analyze scientific publications in international journals by authors in these countries to examine their overall contribution to public health problems. The results also show a higher priority in IDCs for research on Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs).

Countries newly defined as IDCs since 2005 include Turkey, the Russian Federation, and Ukraine. The increased role of China in innovation was also clear in the rankings. The researchers' results also show that IDCs prioritize research concerning NTDs: more than 2 percent of all scientific publications from Brazil focus on NTDs, and more than 1 percent of all scientific publications published from Thailand, Argentina and Indonesia also focus on NTDs.

Moreover, a co-authorship network analysis demonstrated that IDCs can have a critical role in epidemic surveillance, control and prevention. In the Zika epidemic centered in Brazil, Brazilian physicians and researchers had a pivotal role in the generation and distribution of the knowledge used to detect and control its impact. In contrast, the Ebola epidemic that spanned non-IDCs principally relied on external expertise to drive disease control.

"Splitting countries into two groups--rich and poor; developed and developing; leaders and followers--appears to us to be progressively more simplistic, unrealistic and a heritage from colonial times," the researchers say. "Our research clearly shows a prominent role for IDCs in health innovation, research and development on NTDs and in epidemic preparedness, prevention and control."

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In your coverage please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases: http://journals.plos.org/plosntds/article?id=10.1371/journal.pntd.0006469?

FUNDING:

Funding was provided by the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz); National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq), Ministry of Science and Technology no. 573642/2008-7 and Productivity II Fellowship to CMM); Ministry of Education/CAPES (no. 573642/2008-7); Research Foundation of the State of Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ) (no. 573642/2008-7) and CNPq postdoctoral fellowship at WIPO to AGV (202109/2015-1). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

COMPETING INTERESTS: "The authors have declared that no competing interests exist."


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