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November 2006. Does OA threaten journals’ quality? Some publishers think so… “public access equals government censorship” PR's 'pit bull' Eric Dezenhall,

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Presentation on theme: "November 2006. Does OA threaten journals’ quality? Some publishers think so… “public access equals government censorship” PR's 'pit bull' Eric Dezenhall,"— Presentation transcript:

1 November 2006

2 Does OA threaten journals’ quality? Some publishers think so… “public access equals government censorship” PR's 'pit bull' Eric Dezenhall, advising non-OA publishers at Association of American Publishers’ meeting 2006 http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070122/full/445347a.htmlhttp://www.nature.com/news/2007/070122/full/445347a.html Nature Published online: 24 January 2007; Corrected online: 25 January 2007 | doi:10.1038/445347aCorrected

3 November 2006 Does OA threaten journals’ quality? Some publishers think so… “We're like any firm under siege" Barbara Meredith, vice-president, Association of American Publishers http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070122/full/445347a.htmlhttp://www.nature.com/news/2007/070122/full/445347a.html Nature Published online: 24 January 2007; Corrected online: 25 January 2007 | doi:10.1038/445347aCorrected

4 November 2006 Aims of this meeting explore the meaning of quality AND quantity from a clinical perspective investigate how publishers can deliver both quality and quantity in the open access environment – is quantity rising, and quality falling? examine the web’s impact on how quality and quantity [of research] are measured

5 November 2006 What I want to talk about quality AND quantity of BMJ research articles from a clinical perspective BMJ’s hybrid OA model quality measures of research on bmj.com

6 November 2006 What’s the BMJ doing? bmj.com provided completely free access to all content from 1998 January 2006 subscription charges introduced for value added content Full text of original research remains open access

7 November 2006

8 Quality of BMJ research: clinical reach To help doctors make better decisions Free and open access to BMJ research articles HINARI: immediate free access to all bmj.com Nearly 1m unique users of bmj.com a month Print BMJ reaches >106 000 UK doctors Most frequently cited journal in UK press

9 November 2006 BMJ hybrid publishing model: free and open access to research No author or page charges Subsidised by subscriptions, display advertising, BMJGroup profits… …not by BMA membership

10 November 2006 BMJ hybrid publishing model: high quality service to authors Dedicated, personal, fast service 95% read within 24 hours of submission Final decision in two weeks on 95% not sent for external review Final decision in six weeks for 95% of rest Fast track appraisal

11 November 2006 BMJ hybrid publishing model: high quality service to authors Online First publication Immediately to PubMed Central, Crossref, ISI Open (signed) peer review, at least x2 Copy editing/ professional abridging Authors keep copyright Authors get 10% from reprints and translations

12 November 2006 Quality of BMJ research: clinical relevance Helping doctors’ decisions MS committee + clinical advisers + statisticians Research set in context: value added material Abridging to maximise readability and reach Transparency + quality assurance BMJ ethics committee Continuing debate/review: Rapid Responses

13 November 2006 Quality of BMJ research: clinical relevance and Rapid Responses

14 November 2006 Quality of BMJ research: measures BMJ Updates/Journal Watch/Faculty 1000 Med Proportion of international research ISI citations Page impressions in first week of publication Total accesses in 12 and 24 months Number of Rapid Responses Decision times Post-publication review meeting

15 November 2006 Quality of BMJ research: outcomes Of 266 published BMJ research articles in 2005 N American and Australasian most cited and most accessed 4 Rapid Responses per paper 32% articles in BMJ Updates, 26% in Journal Watch (higher for US papers) 13 papers had  5 citations and  5000 page impressions

16 November 2006 Quality of BMJ research: outcomes Systematic reviews/MAs and RCTs Most –citations in year of publication –Rapid Responses –page impressions in week of publication and total accesses in first year Twice as many total accesses in the first year as observational studies

17 November 2006 Best research article 2005

18 November 2006 “when taxis and bread are free, value added commissioned articles can be free” Vitek Tracz, Chairman, BioMed Central to Fiona Godlee, now editor, BMJ

19 November 2006 “impact factor eats open access for breakfast” Fiona Godlee, now editor, BMJ BMJ impact factor was 9.023 in 2005

20 November 2006 Thanks Trish Groves tgroves@bmj.com


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