Happy Birthday JMIR: Call for Papers 20th Anniversary Issue
Happy Birthday: 20 Years of JMIR
In August 1999 we published the very first issue of the Journal of Medical Internet Research
(JMIR), pioneering a new type of journal for an emerging field –
originally, JMIR's scope was the use of the Internet and related
technologies as an enabler and infrastructure for health innovations,
although todays' scope of digital medicine or digital health goes well
beyond "the Internet", and includes emerging technologies such as 3D
printing, games, wearables, and home sensors, etc. (all technologies
that would be unthinkable without the Internet as infrastructure
foundation).
The field went through several name changes – what we first
called “cybermedicine” was later called “eHealth” (electronic health),
then came “cHealth” (connected health), and these days people sometimes
use “digital health” or “digital medicine” (despite Twitter length
restrictions) – but the underlying ideas remain the same: The use of
information and communication technologies and the web helps to empower
patients (not least through peer-to-peer communications), provides a
platform for communication, clinical information and telemedicine (these
days often through mobile devices), and revolutionizes information
access and medical education [1].
While most medical informatics journals focused on clinical
informatics, hospital IT and electronic health records, JMIR recognized
the ubiquitous and pervasive nature of emerging technologies outside of
traditional health care settings.
We were not only innovating on content, but also on form.
And as we wrote 20 years ago, “As publishers of a journal about the
Internet, we are also dedicated to using and experimenting with the
Internet as a medium itself.” [1] –
and experimented we have: We were the first open access electronic-only
journal in medical informatics or even medicine (pre-dating BioMed Central and PloS),
we were the first to mine “tweetations” from Twitter to calculate what
is now known as “altmetrics”, we were the first journal offering a
fast-track payment option for guaranteed decision making within 3 weeks,
we experimented with web archiving cited webpages (WebCite), we were
one of the first journals openly crediting reviewers by name (and now
rewarding them with Karma credits), we pioneered new ways of knowledge
dissemination through social media and cofounded TrendMD, and we
continue to experiment with open peer-review, preprints, registered
reports and even crowdfunding.
Today, JMIR Publications publishes 30 journals, has a
modern Google-like office at Toronto’s waterfront, has a staff of 20,
and was just named one of Canada’s top 500 companies.
Four of our journals have an impact factor (ranging from 3.2 to 5), and are ranked among the top 8 medical informatics journals.
20th Anniversary Special Issue – Call for Papers
To celebrate our milestone and exit from the teenage
years, we are preparing a special issue, to be published at the end of
2019. This special issue will consist mainly of invited papers written
by leaders in the field, but we are also soliciting papers from the
academic community.
This will be an unusual high-profile issue that will
be widely disseminated with press releases and as a special print
publication at conferences.
We specifically encourage papers (reviews,
viewpoints) that comment on major developments from the past 20 years or
provide an outlook on the possibilities or challenges of digital health
for the next 20 years. We also welcome high-quality original research
or systematic reviews. Possible topics for viewpoint papers or reviews
could be “Where will we be in 20 years – what will health care look like
in 2039?”, or “What is the biggest achievement or research breakthrough
in the past 20 years?”.
We would like to have the submission by September 15, 2019, although we may be able to make arrangements to extend this deadline. Contributions will be peer-reviewed.
Potential authors interested in submitting should
file a pre-submission enquiry by sending an email with the subject line
“20th anniversary article proposal” to ed-support@jmir.org outlining their paper idea (title and abstract).
All article processing charges will be waived for papers appearing in the 20th Anniversary Issue.
Invited authors (as of August 21, 2019):
Alex Jadad | From a digital bottle: A message to our selves in 2039 |
Enrico Coiera | The last mile: The challenge of bringing digital health into real-world settings |
Paul Wicks | The rise and fall of online patient communities |
Bertalan Mesko | The art of medicine in the era of artificial intelligence |
John Powell | Trust me I’m a chatbot: Why AI in healthcare won’t pass the Turing test |
Danny Sands | Title TBD |
Dave DeBronkart | Open access as revolution: Knowledge alters power |
Susan Michie | On the dimensional structure of engagement with digital behaviour change interventions (DBCIs): Psychometric evaluation of the ‘DBCI Engagement Scale’) |
Jeremy Wyatt | Title TBD |
Tricia Greenhalgh | Infrastructure revisited: Ethnographic case study and (re)theorisation of the ‘installed base’ of healthcare IT |
John Torous |
A systematic review of smartphone apps for prodromal and early course psychosis and schizophrenia Beyond impact factor: JMIR's 20 years of engaging and encouraging high-quality digital health research from diverse authors |
Bradford Hesse | The internet’s role in solving the last mile problem in medicine |
Kenneth Mandl | TBD |
Helen Christensen | TBD |
Laurie Buis | Implementation: The next giant hurdle to clinical transformation |
Qing Zeng, Stuart Nelson | Will AI translate big data into improved medical care or be a source of confusing intrusion? – A discussion between a physician and a medical informatics researcher |
Rita Kukafka | Digital health citizens on the road to the future |
Renato M.E. Sabbatini | Federated intelligence, the internet and medical decision-making |
Ricky Leung | TBD |
Call for Video Submissions
Alternatively (or additionally) we are inviting short
video messages from researchers, authors, editors, and reviewers,
commenting on the impact of JMIR on the field or you personally, or just
wishing us happy birthday. We will be accepting video clips recorded by
you, but we are also happy to have an interview with you over Skype. If
you do not have time to write an article, providing comments in a short
video or interview might be a good option. Snippets from the videos
will be distributed through our social media channels (such as Twitter
and YouTube), and some might even be published in the 20th anniversary theme issue. You can reflect on (or we can interview you) about your own research, or on a topic of your choosing.
Submit a Quote
As a final option we are soliciting succinct quotes from researchers and the public which we may use in an editorial for the anniversary issue. Authors of these quotes will be credited and we may use their headshots as well.We are seeking your 1-3 sentence answers to the following questions:
- What significant developments happened in the past 20 years, e.g. what is the biggest achievement or research breakthrough in the past 20 years?
- Where will we be in 20 years – what will health care look like in 2039?
If you want to contribute in this part of the anniversary issue, please answer at least one of these questions in this form before Sept 15, 2019.
If you have more to say about this then please consider submitting a full viewpoint article instead (see above).
References
1. Eysenbach G. Welcome to the Journal of Medical Internet Research. J Med Internet Res 1999;1(1):e5; URL: https://www.jmir.org/1999/1/e5 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.1.1.e5.
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