Nicholas J Talley, Virginia Barbour, José Florencio F Lapeña, Peter L Munk, Wilfred C G Peh
{"title":"掠夺性期刊的兴起和崛起,以及对临床实践、健康和职业生涯的风险:APAME 2024 悉尼掠夺性或伪期刊和出版商宣言。","authors":"Nicholas J Talley, Virginia Barbour, José Florencio F Lapeña, Peter L Munk, Wilfred C G Peh","doi":"10.5694/mja2.52410","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>On 28–30 August 2024, the annual meeting of the Asia Pacific Association of Medical Journal Editors (APAME) was held at the University of Newcastle, New South Wales. APAME is a non-governmental, non-partisan, non-profit organisation that supports and promotes medical journalism in the Asia–Pacific region. It provides a forum for education and exchange of ideas and interacts with numerous organisations around the world, including the World Health Organization, to fulfill its mission. This year, APAME issued the <i>Sydney declaration on predatory or pseudo journals and publishers</i> (Box). “Predatory journals” can be defined as those “which actively solicit manuscripts and charge publications fees without providing robust peer review and editorial services”.<span><sup>1</sup></span> However, there is a continuum from predatory to low quality publishing behaviour and even reputable journals are not immune to providing low quality services on occasion.</p><p>Over the last quarter century, medical journals have undergone significant change in how they are published, and virtually all academic journals are now wholly or predominantly available online. Most new journals are fully online. At the same time, there has been a move towards open access publishing to make medical knowledge more globally accessible, thus reducing inequity in knowledge access. Open access has become mandated by many grant-funding organisations and embraced by many researchers. Open access requires a shift of financial model from consumers — largely institutions paying for access to academic journals — to the authors or their institutions paying for work to be universally available to all readers. Although there is a diverse variety of open access models, including access through university repositories and consortial support for open access journals, one model, in which open access is paid for at the level of individual articles, can be particularly problematic. Not only can this model lead to inequity in ability to pay (ie, if authors are not affiliated with institutions that can support open access), it also opens the door to predatory publishing practices.<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span></p><p>Although most traditional journals that adopted open access have maintained their high standards of peer review and adherence to ethical codes of practice, thousands of fraudulent journals have arisen with the explicit goal of enticing unsuspecting authors to pay to get their articles published. Unfortunately, these journals have also tapped into a key driver of academic success — publish or perish. Where authors are driven by incentives to publish many articles, and especially where speed of publishing can be very important and authors are unaware of the predatory practices, they may see these journals as a convenient option, and, ironically, cost effective, as they usually have lower article processing charges than reputable journals.<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>Authors are typically lured with the use of phishing emails (that many <i>MJA</i> readers have undoubtedly found in their inboxes), which frequently refer them to slick, often deceptive websites that may include fake impact factors and editorial boards. In the worst cases, these predatory journals provide little, if any, vetting and peer review, and have a low (or no) threshold for article acceptance.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Rapid publication is promised once open-access charges have been paid. But this is a spectrum; other journals fail to be transparent about their policies and have standards that are too low, and while these journals are also considered deceptive, they are harder to detect. Even journals listed on PubMed may be predatory in a minority of cases; because of the open-access requirements of funders, a publicly funded study published in a predatory journal may end up being listed in PubMed<span><sup>5</sup></span> regardless of the journal's quality or standards.</p><p>Special issues of journals are another version of predatory publishing in which authors are encouraged to submit articles for issues that have no or little editorial curation, by editors who have only a tenuous relation with that journal. The recent plan to retract about 1200 more articles (than the original 511) by Hindawi and its parent company, Wiley, was related to “Special Issues in these journals” being “targeted by papermills and bad actors, with researcher identities manipulated (to appear as legitimate researchers) and content fabricated (to appear as legitimate content).”<span><sup>6</sup></span> Predatory journals therefore have a corrosive effect at many levels — for readers and authors, and for the wider research community.</p><p>Readers of the <i>MJA</i> and other reputable medical journals expect that articles have been carefully reviewed and vetted, and the information contained therein is accurate, reliable and safely applicable. Anyone turning to information in a predatory journal has no such reasonable assurance. In these deceptive journals, faulty, weak and inaccurate research is published, which may adversely affect clinical care and research. Furthermore, increasing numbers of citations to predatory journal research are cropping up in articles sent to reputable journals, showing that the contamination of poor or even fake research is spreading.<span><sup>7, 8</sup></span> In a further complication, good articles that are published in poor journals may never be seen, as many of these journals are not properly indexed in recognised reputable indices (eg, PubMed, Directory of Open Access Journals, Web of Science, Scopus) and may not be archived in perpetuity.</p><p>Authors may be affected in multiple ways. Crucially, they are likely to receive no feedback to improve their articles (which is part of a healthy peer-review process).<span><sup>4</sup></span> The authors are also fleeced of their funds, which is especially heartbreaking as many of the authors submitting to these journals are from low- and middle-income countries. And finally, if the authors list these articles on their curriculum vitae, they risk diminished future opportunities for education and employment.<span><sup>9</sup></span></p><p>How to avoid being duped? The use of artificial intelligence programs to detect predatory journals has so far not proved very promising.<span><sup>10</sup></span> Lists of predatory journals are available but may be incomplete, unreliable, and out of date.<span><sup>11</sup></span> Work has been done to list the characteristics of predatory journals.<span><sup>1, 4, 9</sup></span> In the end, the answer is likely to come from authors being very careful, and doing their own homework, especially if submitting to an unfamiliar journal. Helpful checklists are available.<span><sup>12</sup></span> Readers too must take care in assessing the research they read.</p><p>APAME issued this declaration because of the growing concern for the damage that predatory journals inflict.<span><sup>13</sup></span> In conjunction with kindred organisations, APAME is committed not only to avoiding predatory journal practices, but to make every effort to educate and empower editors, peer reviewers, authors, librarians and ethical publishers to minimise their impact.</p><p>Nicholas Talley is the President of APAME, Emeritus Editor-in-Chief of the <i>MJA</i>, a Section Editor for <i>UptoDate</i>, Associate Editor for <i>Mayo Clinic Proceedings</i>, Chair of the Editorial Advisory Board of Gastroenterology, and is supported by research funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), Department of Defence and industry. Nicholas Talley has received personal fees from Allakos (gastroduodenal eosinophilic disease; 2021), twoXAR Viscera Labs (irritable bowel syndrome–diarrhoea; USA, 2021), IsoThrive (esophageal microbiome; 2021), BluMaiden (microbiome advisory board; 2021), Rose Pharma (irritable bowel syndrome; 2021), Intrinsic Medicine (human milk oligosaccharide; 2022), Comvita Mānuka Honey (digestive health; 2021), Astra Zeneca (2022), Brown University (fibre and laxation systematic review; 2024–2025), outside the submitted work. In addition, Nicholas Talley has a patent Nepean Dyspepsia Index (NDI) 1998, a patent Licensing Questionnaires Talley Bowel Disease Questionnaire licensed to Mayo/Talley, “Diagnostic marker for functional gastrointestinal disorders” Australian Provisional Patent Application 2021901692, “Methods and compositions for treating age-related neurodegenerative disease associated with dysbiosis” US Application No. 63/537,725.</p><p>Virginia Barbour is the Editor-in-Chief of the <i>MJA</i>, which is part of the Wiley–CAUL deal, and which receives fees for open access publishing. She is co-Chair of DORA (Declaration on Research Assessment) and a member of the NHMRC's Research Quality Steering Committee.</p><p>Jose Lapeña is a Past President of APAME, Secretary of the World Association of Medical Editors (WAME) and WAME board representative to the Directory of Open Access Journals, and Editor-in-Chief of the <i>Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery</i>.</p><p>Peter Munk is past Editor-in-Chief of the <i>Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal</i>, Associate Editor of the <i>British Journal of Radiology</i> and APAME International Liaison.</p><p>Wilfred Peh is a Past President of APAME, Advisor and past Editor-in-Chief of the <i>Singapore Medical Journal</i>, and Senior Editor of the <i>British Journal of Radiology</i>.</p><p>Not commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.</p>","PeriodicalId":18214,"journal":{"name":"Medical Journal of Australia","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":6.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.5694/mja2.52410","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The rise and rise of predatory journals and the risks to clinical practice, health and careers: the APAME 2024 Sydney declaration on predatory or pseudo journals and publishers\",\"authors\":\"Nicholas J Talley, Virginia Barbour, José Florencio F Lapeña, Peter L Munk, Wilfred C G Peh\",\"doi\":\"10.5694/mja2.52410\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>On 28–30 August 2024, the annual meeting of the Asia Pacific Association of Medical Journal Editors (APAME) was held at the University of Newcastle, New South Wales. APAME is a non-governmental, non-partisan, non-profit organisation that supports and promotes medical journalism in the Asia–Pacific region. It provides a forum for education and exchange of ideas and interacts with numerous organisations around the world, including the World Health Organization, to fulfill its mission. This year, APAME issued the <i>Sydney declaration on predatory or pseudo journals and publishers</i> (Box). “Predatory journals” can be defined as those “which actively solicit manuscripts and charge publications fees without providing robust peer review and editorial services”.<span><sup>1</sup></span> However, there is a continuum from predatory to low quality publishing behaviour and even reputable journals are not immune to providing low quality services on occasion.</p><p>Over the last quarter century, medical journals have undergone significant change in how they are published, and virtually all academic journals are now wholly or predominantly available online. Most new journals are fully online. At the same time, there has been a move towards open access publishing to make medical knowledge more globally accessible, thus reducing inequity in knowledge access. Open access has become mandated by many grant-funding organisations and embraced by many researchers. Open access requires a shift of financial model from consumers — largely institutions paying for access to academic journals — to the authors or their institutions paying for work to be universally available to all readers. Although there is a diverse variety of open access models, including access through university repositories and consortial support for open access journals, one model, in which open access is paid for at the level of individual articles, can be particularly problematic. Not only can this model lead to inequity in ability to pay (ie, if authors are not affiliated with institutions that can support open access), it also opens the door to predatory publishing practices.<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span></p><p>Although most traditional journals that adopted open access have maintained their high standards of peer review and adherence to ethical codes of practice, thousands of fraudulent journals have arisen with the explicit goal of enticing unsuspecting authors to pay to get their articles published. Unfortunately, these journals have also tapped into a key driver of academic success — publish or perish. Where authors are driven by incentives to publish many articles, and especially where speed of publishing can be very important and authors are unaware of the predatory practices, they may see these journals as a convenient option, and, ironically, cost effective, as they usually have lower article processing charges than reputable journals.<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>Authors are typically lured with the use of phishing emails (that many <i>MJA</i> readers have undoubtedly found in their inboxes), which frequently refer them to slick, often deceptive websites that may include fake impact factors and editorial boards. In the worst cases, these predatory journals provide little, if any, vetting and peer review, and have a low (or no) threshold for article acceptance.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Rapid publication is promised once open-access charges have been paid. But this is a spectrum; other journals fail to be transparent about their policies and have standards that are too low, and while these journals are also considered deceptive, they are harder to detect. Even journals listed on PubMed may be predatory in a minority of cases; because of the open-access requirements of funders, a publicly funded study published in a predatory journal may end up being listed in PubMed<span><sup>5</sup></span> regardless of the journal's quality or standards.</p><p>Special issues of journals are another version of predatory publishing in which authors are encouraged to submit articles for issues that have no or little editorial curation, by editors who have only a tenuous relation with that journal. The recent plan to retract about 1200 more articles (than the original 511) by Hindawi and its parent company, Wiley, was related to “Special Issues in these journals” being “targeted by papermills and bad actors, with researcher identities manipulated (to appear as legitimate researchers) and content fabricated (to appear as legitimate content).”<span><sup>6</sup></span> Predatory journals therefore have a corrosive effect at many levels — for readers and authors, and for the wider research community.</p><p>Readers of the <i>MJA</i> and other reputable medical journals expect that articles have been carefully reviewed and vetted, and the information contained therein is accurate, reliable and safely applicable. Anyone turning to information in a predatory journal has no such reasonable assurance. In these deceptive journals, faulty, weak and inaccurate research is published, which may adversely affect clinical care and research. Furthermore, increasing numbers of citations to predatory journal research are cropping up in articles sent to reputable journals, showing that the contamination of poor or even fake research is spreading.<span><sup>7, 8</sup></span> In a further complication, good articles that are published in poor journals may never be seen, as many of these journals are not properly indexed in recognised reputable indices (eg, PubMed, Directory of Open Access Journals, Web of Science, Scopus) and may not be archived in perpetuity.</p><p>Authors may be affected in multiple ways. Crucially, they are likely to receive no feedback to improve their articles (which is part of a healthy peer-review process).<span><sup>4</sup></span> The authors are also fleeced of their funds, which is especially heartbreaking as many of the authors submitting to these journals are from low- and middle-income countries. And finally, if the authors list these articles on their curriculum vitae, they risk diminished future opportunities for education and employment.<span><sup>9</sup></span></p><p>How to avoid being duped? The use of artificial intelligence programs to detect predatory journals has so far not proved very promising.<span><sup>10</sup></span> Lists of predatory journals are available but may be incomplete, unreliable, and out of date.<span><sup>11</sup></span> Work has been done to list the characteristics of predatory journals.<span><sup>1, 4, 9</sup></span> In the end, the answer is likely to come from authors being very careful, and doing their own homework, especially if submitting to an unfamiliar journal. Helpful checklists are available.<span><sup>12</sup></span> Readers too must take care in assessing the research they read.</p><p>APAME issued this declaration because of the growing concern for the damage that predatory journals inflict.<span><sup>13</sup></span> In conjunction with kindred organisations, APAME is committed not only to avoiding predatory journal practices, but to make every effort to educate and empower editors, peer reviewers, authors, librarians and ethical publishers to minimise their impact.</p><p>Nicholas Talley is the President of APAME, Emeritus Editor-in-Chief of the <i>MJA</i>, a Section Editor for <i>UptoDate</i>, Associate Editor for <i>Mayo Clinic Proceedings</i>, Chair of the Editorial Advisory Board of Gastroenterology, and is supported by research funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), Department of Defence and industry. Nicholas Talley has received personal fees from Allakos (gastroduodenal eosinophilic disease; 2021), twoXAR Viscera Labs (irritable bowel syndrome–diarrhoea; USA, 2021), IsoThrive (esophageal microbiome; 2021), BluMaiden (microbiome advisory board; 2021), Rose Pharma (irritable bowel syndrome; 2021), Intrinsic Medicine (human milk oligosaccharide; 2022), Comvita Mānuka Honey (digestive health; 2021), Astra Zeneca (2022), Brown University (fibre and laxation systematic review; 2024–2025), outside the submitted work. In addition, Nicholas Talley has a patent Nepean Dyspepsia Index (NDI) 1998, a patent Licensing Questionnaires Talley Bowel Disease Questionnaire licensed to Mayo/Talley, “Diagnostic marker for functional gastrointestinal disorders” Australian Provisional Patent Application 2021901692, “Methods and compositions for treating age-related neurodegenerative disease associated with dysbiosis” US Application No. 63/537,725.</p><p>Virginia Barbour is the Editor-in-Chief of the <i>MJA</i>, which is part of the Wiley–CAUL deal, and which receives fees for open access publishing. She is co-Chair of DORA (Declaration on Research Assessment) and a member of the NHMRC's Research Quality Steering Committee.</p><p>Jose Lapeña is a Past President of APAME, Secretary of the World Association of Medical Editors (WAME) and WAME board representative to the Directory of Open Access Journals, and Editor-in-Chief of the <i>Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery</i>.</p><p>Peter Munk is past Editor-in-Chief of the <i>Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal</i>, Associate Editor of the <i>British Journal of Radiology</i> and APAME International Liaison.</p><p>Wilfred Peh is a Past President of APAME, Advisor and past Editor-in-Chief of the <i>Singapore Medical Journal</i>, and Senior Editor of the <i>British Journal of Radiology</i>.</p><p>Not commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":18214,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Medical Journal of Australia\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":6.7000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-09-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.5694/mja2.52410\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Medical Journal of Australia\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"3\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.5694/mja2.52410\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"医学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Medical Journal of Australia","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.5694/mja2.52410","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
The rise and rise of predatory journals and the risks to clinical practice, health and careers: the APAME 2024 Sydney declaration on predatory or pseudo journals and publishers
On 28–30 August 2024, the annual meeting of the Asia Pacific Association of Medical Journal Editors (APAME) was held at the University of Newcastle, New South Wales. APAME is a non-governmental, non-partisan, non-profit organisation that supports and promotes medical journalism in the Asia–Pacific region. It provides a forum for education and exchange of ideas and interacts with numerous organisations around the world, including the World Health Organization, to fulfill its mission. This year, APAME issued the Sydney declaration on predatory or pseudo journals and publishers (Box). “Predatory journals” can be defined as those “which actively solicit manuscripts and charge publications fees without providing robust peer review and editorial services”.1 However, there is a continuum from predatory to low quality publishing behaviour and even reputable journals are not immune to providing low quality services on occasion.
Over the last quarter century, medical journals have undergone significant change in how they are published, and virtually all academic journals are now wholly or predominantly available online. Most new journals are fully online. At the same time, there has been a move towards open access publishing to make medical knowledge more globally accessible, thus reducing inequity in knowledge access. Open access has become mandated by many grant-funding organisations and embraced by many researchers. Open access requires a shift of financial model from consumers — largely institutions paying for access to academic journals — to the authors or their institutions paying for work to be universally available to all readers. Although there is a diverse variety of open access models, including access through university repositories and consortial support for open access journals, one model, in which open access is paid for at the level of individual articles, can be particularly problematic. Not only can this model lead to inequity in ability to pay (ie, if authors are not affiliated with institutions that can support open access), it also opens the door to predatory publishing practices.2, 3
Although most traditional journals that adopted open access have maintained their high standards of peer review and adherence to ethical codes of practice, thousands of fraudulent journals have arisen with the explicit goal of enticing unsuspecting authors to pay to get their articles published. Unfortunately, these journals have also tapped into a key driver of academic success — publish or perish. Where authors are driven by incentives to publish many articles, and especially where speed of publishing can be very important and authors are unaware of the predatory practices, they may see these journals as a convenient option, and, ironically, cost effective, as they usually have lower article processing charges than reputable journals.1
Authors are typically lured with the use of phishing emails (that many MJA readers have undoubtedly found in their inboxes), which frequently refer them to slick, often deceptive websites that may include fake impact factors and editorial boards. In the worst cases, these predatory journals provide little, if any, vetting and peer review, and have a low (or no) threshold for article acceptance.4 Rapid publication is promised once open-access charges have been paid. But this is a spectrum; other journals fail to be transparent about their policies and have standards that are too low, and while these journals are also considered deceptive, they are harder to detect. Even journals listed on PubMed may be predatory in a minority of cases; because of the open-access requirements of funders, a publicly funded study published in a predatory journal may end up being listed in PubMed5 regardless of the journal's quality or standards.
Special issues of journals are another version of predatory publishing in which authors are encouraged to submit articles for issues that have no or little editorial curation, by editors who have only a tenuous relation with that journal. The recent plan to retract about 1200 more articles (than the original 511) by Hindawi and its parent company, Wiley, was related to “Special Issues in these journals” being “targeted by papermills and bad actors, with researcher identities manipulated (to appear as legitimate researchers) and content fabricated (to appear as legitimate content).”6 Predatory journals therefore have a corrosive effect at many levels — for readers and authors, and for the wider research community.
Readers of the MJA and other reputable medical journals expect that articles have been carefully reviewed and vetted, and the information contained therein is accurate, reliable and safely applicable. Anyone turning to information in a predatory journal has no such reasonable assurance. In these deceptive journals, faulty, weak and inaccurate research is published, which may adversely affect clinical care and research. Furthermore, increasing numbers of citations to predatory journal research are cropping up in articles sent to reputable journals, showing that the contamination of poor or even fake research is spreading.7, 8 In a further complication, good articles that are published in poor journals may never be seen, as many of these journals are not properly indexed in recognised reputable indices (eg, PubMed, Directory of Open Access Journals, Web of Science, Scopus) and may not be archived in perpetuity.
Authors may be affected in multiple ways. Crucially, they are likely to receive no feedback to improve their articles (which is part of a healthy peer-review process).4 The authors are also fleeced of their funds, which is especially heartbreaking as many of the authors submitting to these journals are from low- and middle-income countries. And finally, if the authors list these articles on their curriculum vitae, they risk diminished future opportunities for education and employment.9
How to avoid being duped? The use of artificial intelligence programs to detect predatory journals has so far not proved very promising.10 Lists of predatory journals are available but may be incomplete, unreliable, and out of date.11 Work has been done to list the characteristics of predatory journals.1, 4, 9 In the end, the answer is likely to come from authors being very careful, and doing their own homework, especially if submitting to an unfamiliar journal. Helpful checklists are available.12 Readers too must take care in assessing the research they read.
APAME issued this declaration because of the growing concern for the damage that predatory journals inflict.13 In conjunction with kindred organisations, APAME is committed not only to avoiding predatory journal practices, but to make every effort to educate and empower editors, peer reviewers, authors, librarians and ethical publishers to minimise their impact.
Nicholas Talley is the President of APAME, Emeritus Editor-in-Chief of the MJA, a Section Editor for UptoDate, Associate Editor for Mayo Clinic Proceedings, Chair of the Editorial Advisory Board of Gastroenterology, and is supported by research funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), Department of Defence and industry. Nicholas Talley has received personal fees from Allakos (gastroduodenal eosinophilic disease; 2021), twoXAR Viscera Labs (irritable bowel syndrome–diarrhoea; USA, 2021), IsoThrive (esophageal microbiome; 2021), BluMaiden (microbiome advisory board; 2021), Rose Pharma (irritable bowel syndrome; 2021), Intrinsic Medicine (human milk oligosaccharide; 2022), Comvita Mānuka Honey (digestive health; 2021), Astra Zeneca (2022), Brown University (fibre and laxation systematic review; 2024–2025), outside the submitted work. In addition, Nicholas Talley has a patent Nepean Dyspepsia Index (NDI) 1998, a patent Licensing Questionnaires Talley Bowel Disease Questionnaire licensed to Mayo/Talley, “Diagnostic marker for functional gastrointestinal disorders” Australian Provisional Patent Application 2021901692, “Methods and compositions for treating age-related neurodegenerative disease associated with dysbiosis” US Application No. 63/537,725.
Virginia Barbour is the Editor-in-Chief of the MJA, which is part of the Wiley–CAUL deal, and which receives fees for open access publishing. She is co-Chair of DORA (Declaration on Research Assessment) and a member of the NHMRC's Research Quality Steering Committee.
Jose Lapeña is a Past President of APAME, Secretary of the World Association of Medical Editors (WAME) and WAME board representative to the Directory of Open Access Journals, and Editor-in-Chief of the Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery.
Peter Munk is past Editor-in-Chief of the Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal, Associate Editor of the British Journal of Radiology and APAME International Liaison.
Wilfred Peh is a Past President of APAME, Advisor and past Editor-in-Chief of the Singapore Medical Journal, and Senior Editor of the British Journal of Radiology.
期刊介绍:
The Medical Journal of Australia (MJA) stands as Australia's foremost general medical journal, leading the dissemination of high-quality research and commentary to shape health policy and influence medical practices within the country. Under the leadership of Professor Virginia Barbour, the expert editorial team at MJA is dedicated to providing authors with a constructive and collaborative peer-review and publication process. Established in 1914, the MJA has evolved into a modern journal that upholds its founding values, maintaining a commitment to supporting the medical profession by delivering high-quality and pertinent information essential to medical practice.