Kendle Healthcare
The experts on experts
Network mapping
Kendle Healthcare's network maps show connections between key opinion leaders such as co-authorship, participation in clinical trials, and membership of the same committees. How does this help you?
- Identify new people - The research process behind the mapping can identify people who were previously unknown, and give a sense of their standing in their academic community
- Bring some clarity to a complex system - Often a KOL mapping can produce too much information, and make it difficult to target your activities
- Understand relationships - The doctors involved in a therapy area often have very strong links with their peers. You can find out who is particularly well-connected, who keeps themselves to themselves, who is most likely to work with those abroad, etc.
- Look for groups - We use a method called cluster analysis to find pockets of interconnected people within overall networks. Often these are colleagues at a certain department, but also may be friends, former teacher/pupil, working groups or research groups
- Segment - Which doctors publish on which topics, is there a division between paediatrics and adult, do the basic scientists work with the clinicians?
- Multidisciplinary authorship groups - Do most clinicians often work with a geneticist, or an epidemiologist, or a statistician?

Network map of co-authorship amongst UK KOLs