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Editorial

What is a medical journal good for?

Nicholas Pimlott

MD CCFP FCFP, SCIENTIFIC EDITOR We must dare to think about “unthinkable things”

because when things become unthinkable, thinking stops and action becomes mindless.

James William Fulbright

O

ver the past 8 years I have been presenting talks and workshops on writing for publication in med- ical journals to family physicians and other health care professionals across the country. One of the many things I have learned from doing so has been that for most family physicians, including university-affliated academic family physicians like me, medical journals remain a mysterious “black box.”

Not long after I became the Scientific Editor at Canadian Family Physician (CFP) in 2009, I read The Trouble with Medical Journals1 by the former editor of the BMJ, Richard Smith. Arguably, I might have been better off reading the book before I took on the job at CFP, as Dr Smith carefully and systematically (but also, fortu- nately, humorously) cataloged and discussed the many problems of medical journals ranging from the pitfalls of peer review—lousy at detecting fraud or plagiarism—

to the conficts of interest that many medical journals have, particularly with the pharmaceutical industry.1 The Trouble with Medical Journals should be mandatory read- ing for all doctors.

More recently, in 2016, Dr Smith gave a talk to the International Society of Medical Publication Professionals at which he refected on the many functions of medical journals and then ranked them on how he thought they were doing.2 In what most of us consider to be their pri- mary functions—selecting and publishing relevant, high- quality research and supporting continuing professional development—he rated journals poorly at somewhere between 2 and 4 out of a score of 10.

Paradoxically, he rated medical journals highly (a score of 9 out of 10) for the very thing we least expect them to do: putting issues on the agenda—like, for example, the social determinants of health,3,4 climate change,5 and the effects of colonization on the health of Indigenous people6—all issues that CFP has brought to the fore for family physicians over the past few years.

The relaunch of the CFP website earlier this year has allowed us to provide yet another forum to put impor- tant issues on the family medicine agenda through the creation of a new blog space. The frst blog contributions

have been posted (www.cfp.ca/blog)7 and we encour- age readers to access them and to contribute their own refection or opinion on an issue or a situation in family medicine or health care by going to our guidelines page on the website (www.cfp.ca/content/cfp-blog-guide lines). Over time we hope to create a space at CFP where family physicians can contribute to a national conversa- tion about the things that our profession needs to think about in a rapidly changing and challenging world.

Although Dr Smith laments that few journals attempt the role of putting issues on the agenda, CFP has been very effective at doing so over the years, publishing thoughtful and sometimes provocative editorials, commentary, and debates—and the September issue is no exception.

In a commentary (page 664) entitled “Competing demands and opportunities in primary care,”8 Christina Korownyk and her colleagues compare the relative ben- efts of interventions in primary care—from the treat- ment of acute symptomatic illness to prevention and health promotion—using evidence from randomized controlled trials to ask where our priorities should lie.

In a world in which the time pressures on family phy- sicians to provide care to the acutely ill and those with complex chronic health conditions, as well as to deliver comprehensive preventive care, continues to grow9 the authors ask a timely question.

As Richard Smith puts it, “Although ‘good at telling people what to think about [medical journals] are less good at telling them what to think,’ which, I think, is a good thing.”2

So do we.

References

1. Smith R. The trouble with medical journals. London, Engl: Royal Society Medical Press; 2007.

2. Smith R. What are medical journals for and how well do they fulfl those functions? [blog] BMJ Opinion 2016 Apr 19. Available from: http://blogs.bmj.

com/bmj/2016/04/19/richard-smith-what-are-medical-journals-for- and-how-well-do-they-fulfl-those-functions. Accessed 2017 Jul 31.

3. De Leeuw S. Physician activism and prescribing against poverty. Can Fam Physician 2016;62:332-5 (Eng), e218-21 (Fr).

4. Buchman S, Woollard R, Meili R, Goel R. Practising social accountability.

From theory to action. Can Fam Physician 2016;62:15-8 (Eng), 24-7 (Fr).

5. De Leeuw S. Beyond frozen ground. Climate change and health. Can Fam Physician 2016;62:424-7 (Eng), e278-81 (Fr).

6. De Leeuw S. Indigenous medicine. Approaching the challenges with courage and humility. Can Fam Physician 2017;63:468-71 (Eng), e324-7 (Fr).

7. Canadian Family Physician [website]. Blog posts. Mississauga, ON: Canadian Family Physician; 2017. Available from: www.cfp.ca/blog. Accessed 2017 Jul 31.

8. Korownyk C, McCormack J, Kolber MR, Garrison S, Allan GM. Competing demands and opportunities in primary care. Can Fam Physician 2017;63:

664-8 (Eng), e371-6 (Fr).

9. Pimlott N. Who has time for family medicine? Can Fam Physician 2008;54:14-6.

Cet article se trouve aussi en français à la page 663.

662

Canadian Family Physician Le Médecin de famille canadien

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VOL 63: SEPTEMBER • SEPTEMBRE 2017

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