规划杂志的未来——有你的发言权

Magdalena Annersten Gershater, Angus Forbes
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这种品质在当前的版本中是显而易见的,它有一些重要的工作,强调患有糖尿病的儿童和年轻人的需要。在对Viklund和Örtqvist的研究中,我们看到了进一步的证据,表明一些年轻人仍然在与这种疾病的心理负担作斗争。这似乎是对这一人群的研究中一个不变的发现。虽然作者建议对糖尿病对生活质量的影响进行更多的筛查,但似乎也有必要尝试并针对那些最困难的人,提供更有效的社会心理干预。在未来更多的干预研究将是重要的和非常欢迎的杂志。在Tiberg等人的研究中,我们比较了医院和家庭对新诊断的糖尿病儿童的支持。研究表明,总体而言,这两种模式是等效的,尽管在家工作的群体可能会有更高的满意度。然而,我们应该考虑这项研究的翻译影响。鉴于各国提供的护理存在很大差异,我们需要更多地考虑影响我们在诊断时支持儿童和父母的方式的共同原则,以便将这些原则应用于不同的环境。我们也可以探讨不同模式的经济效益。Munster等人的研究聚焦于一个特殊的临床问题,即儿童的高脂症。分析强调了一些重要的临床带走点,特别是需要有效的部位轮换实践。最后,我们有一个不同类型的文章的例子是该杂志提倡的,临床评论。这些论文提供了重要的,有时相当复杂的主题的最新技术。在这一期中,我们回顾了Marshall和Caraher对囊性纤维化和糖尿病的研究。这篇论文强调了在这一人群中管理糖尿病的许多挑战,以及处理这些问题的一些重要策略。同样,正是这些材料的收录使这本杂志引起人们的兴趣,并突出了它作为传播知识手段的重要性。所以在这个版本中,我们有一些明确的证据来证明为什么这本杂志对糖尿病护士的职业很重要。然而,同样清楚的是,该杂志有进一步发展的空间,对整个欧洲的糖尿病护理界变得更加重要。该杂志目前有来自北欧国家和英国的论文优势。如果我们能从欧洲其他地方得到更多高质量的提交,将会大大增强。虽然这在一定程度上可能反映了欧洲糖尿病护士研究基础设施投资的缺乏和日益紧张的资金环境,但所有专业团体都有责任确保他们产生必要的知识,以提高他们提供的护理质量。因此,我们需要与你们所有人合作,确定该杂志和更广泛的糖尿病护士社区如何实现这一目标。杂志将继续发展,我们的目标是继续扩大我们与Wiley共同开发的平台。目前正在考虑新期刊的形式。我们致力于使该杂志在糖尿病护理的临床研究中发挥重要作用,但我们也需要听取您的意见,以确保该杂志满足您的需求。因此,我们将给你们所有作为《科学与发展杂志》的成员发送一封电子邮件,其中有一个关于期刊未来的调查链接。请通过完成它来表达我们的团结。我们当然也会让您知道期刊未来的格式和位置,我们也鼓励您继续向期刊投稿。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Planning the journal's future – have your say

This quality is evident in the current edition which has some important work emphasising the needs of children and young people with diabetes.

In the study of Viklund and Örtqvist we see yet further evidence that some young people still struggle with the psychological burden of the disease. This seems to be a constant finding in research of this population. While the authors suggest more screening for the impact of diabetes on quality of life, it also seems to be an imperative to try and target those with most difficulty and provide much more effective psychosocial interventions. In the future more studies of intervention would be important and very welcomed by this journal.

In the study of Tiberg et al we have a comparison of hospital and home based support for newly diagnosed children with diabetes. The study shows that overall the two models are equivalent, although there may be enhanced satisfaction in the home based group. However, we should consider the translational impact of this study. Given that care provision is so variable between countries, we need more consideration of the common principles that impact on the way we support children and parents at diagnosis so these can be applied in different settings. We might also explore the economic benefits of different models.

The study by Munster et al focuses on a specific clinical problem that of hyperlipotrophy in children. The analysis highlights some important clinical take away points and in particular the need for effective site rotation practices.

Finally, we have an example of a different kind of article that the journal has promoted, the clinical review. These papers provide state of the art updates on important and sometimes quite complex topics. In this edition we have a review on cystic fibrosis and diabetes from Marshall and Caraher. The paper highlights the many challenges of managing diabetes in this population, alongside some important strategies for dealing with those problems. Again it is the inclusion of such material that hopefully makes the journal of interest and highlights its importance as a means to disseminate knowledge.

So within this edition we have some clear evidence of why the journal is important to the professionof diabetes nurses. However, it is also clear that the journal has scope to develop further and become more important to the diabetes nursing community across Europe.

The journal currently has a preponderance of papers from the Nordic countries and the UK. It would be greatly enhanced if we could have more high quality submission from elsewhere in Europe. While in part this may reflect the lack of investment in research infrastructure for diabetes nurses across Europe and the increasingly tight funding environment, it is incumbent on all professional groups to take responsibility to ensure that they generate the knowledge necessary to improve the quality of the care they deliver. Hence, we need to engage with you all to determine how the journal and the wider community of nurses in diabetes can make this happen.

The journal will go on and we aim to continue to expand from the platform we have developed with Wiley. The form of the new journal is currently being considered. We are committed to making the journal important for clinical research in diabetes nursing, but we also need to hear from you to ensure that the journal meets your needs. Therefore, we will be sending you all as FEND members an e-mail with link to a survey on the future of the journal. Please show solidarity in this by completing it. We will of course also let you know the future format and location for the journal, we also encourage you to continue submitting papers to the journal in transition.

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Factors predicting glycaemic control in young persons with type 1 diabetes Planning the journal's future – have your say Comparison of hospital-based and hospital-based home care at diabetes onset in children Cystic fibrosis related diabetes – causes, impact on health and management of patients Dermatological complications of insulin therapy in children with type 1 diabetes
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