Skip to main content
Erschienen in: The Journal of Headache and Pain 4/2008

Open Access 01.08.2008 | Editorial

A tier-upon-tier march towards the impact factor

verfasst von: Paolo Martelletti

Erschienen in: The Journal of Headache and Pain | Ausgabe 4/2008

download
DOWNLOAD
print
DRUCKEN
insite
SUCHEN
Audentes fortuna juvat (Fortune favors the bold)
Virgil, Aeneid, X, 284
At the beginning of this year, as I wrote in my usual editorial addressed to the readers of The Journal of Headache and Pain (JHP) that “ISI inclusion represents our aim for the near future” [1], I certainly could not imagine that just at that time Thomson Reuters (formerly ISI) would include JHP in their indexing system, considered as the strictest and most selective organ among such control means of scientific quality. The reason why I could not know it was that I never submitted an evaluation request. Thomson Reuters/ISI independently co-opted JHP first in Derwent Drug File and then in Science Citation Index (SCI/SCI-E) with the first issue of 2008.
The news reached me during the 17th IHRS Meeting in Chicago was taking place, and I felt very proud to announce this news to my colleagues. I also started making remarks, which I want to share with the readers of this journal.
The tier-upon-tier march that JHP had gone through during these years came back to my mind. I recalled its foundation in 1999, the first issue in 2000, the 4 years of positive internal opposition as Co-Editor, my first year as chair in 2004, the expansion from 4 to 6 issues per year and the almost immediate inclusion in PubMed/Medline, which had at the time an acceptance rate of 10%, in June 2005. Today, 285 of the 585 published articles are indexed in PubMed/Medline.
A further crucial step was the partnership with the European Headache Federation (EHF), with which we shared strategic goals and a common support base [2]. The last stride to date is the inclusion in Derwent Drug File and then in the SCI/SCI-E database by Thomson Reuters/ISI (acceptance rate 15%).
The accomplishment in such a short time of those significant targets implies that JHP fulfills the prerequisites of Thomson Reuters/ISI: quality of both content and layout, quality of publishing and cited authors, quality of editorial board, and timeliness.
The next stage will be, at last, automatic: after a 24-month evaluation period in Current Contents (2008–2009), JHP will have its impact factor (IF) in 2010. The IF will be published, as for other journals, in the Journal Citation Reports (JCR) in June 2011. In the meantime, calculation of citations and therefore virtual impact factor (VIF), which is an unofficial information, is possible through Web of Science (http://​www.​isiknowledge.​com). At present, the VIF of JHP results interesting and competitive if compared with other area journals which already own IF.
An additional element which has helped to reach these achievements is a strong reduction in the rejection rate from 70% (2005) to 30% (2007), which reflects a leap in the quality of submitted manuscripts as well as the disappearance of low-profile manuscripts.
I wish to thank all the people who believed, and still believe, that headache medicine, too, needed competition. JHP can now take part in a sort of “Tri Nations”. Not in rugby, of course, but in headache sciences. It is a honour for us to do so.
I also thank those who paid attention to the “moral suasion” which JHP has promoted since 2003 [3] towards a strong public health area devoted to headache medicine. Many individuals and initiatives such as the WHO Global Campaign Lifting the Burden have shared their resources with JHP in order to produce exciting means for the expansion of headache medicine into the medical as well as the social and political world.
This extraordinary intellectual ownership has to be shared with JHP’s readership as a whole.

Conflict of interest

None.
Open Access This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License ( https://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by-nc/​2.​0 ), which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
download
DOWNLOAD
print
DRUCKEN
Literatur
2.
Zurück zum Zitat Martelletti P, Leonardi M (eds) (2003) International forum on global impact of migraine. J Headache Pain 4:S1–S90 Martelletti P, Leonardi M (eds) (2003) International forum on global impact of migraine. J Headache Pain 4:S1–S90
3.
Zurück zum Zitat Steiner TJ, Paemeleire K, Jensen R, Valade D, Savi L, Lainez MJ, Diener HC, Martelletti P, Couturier EG, European Headache Federation; Lifting The Burden: The Global Campaign to Reduce the Burden of Headache Worldwide; World Health Organization (2007) European principles of management of common headache disorders in primary care. J Headache Pain 8(suppl 1):S3–S47 Steiner TJ, Paemeleire K, Jensen R, Valade D, Savi L, Lainez MJ, Diener HC, Martelletti P, Couturier EG, European Headache Federation; Lifting The Burden: The Global Campaign to Reduce the Burden of Headache Worldwide; World Health Organization (2007) European principles of management of common headache disorders in primary care. J Headache Pain 8(suppl 1):S3–S47
Metadaten
Titel
A tier-upon-tier march towards the impact factor
verfasst von
Paolo Martelletti
Publikationsdatum
01.08.2008
Verlag
Springer Milan
Erschienen in
The Journal of Headache and Pain / Ausgabe 4/2008
Print ISSN: 1129-2369
Elektronische ISSN: 1129-2377
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10194-008-0050-x

Weitere Artikel der Ausgabe 4/2008

The Journal of Headache and Pain 4/2008 Zur Ausgabe

Bei schweren Reaktionen auf Insektenstiche empfiehlt sich eine spezifische Immuntherapie

Insektenstiche sind bei Erwachsenen die häufigsten Auslöser einer Anaphylaxie. Einen wirksamen Schutz vor schweren anaphylaktischen Reaktionen bietet die allergenspezifische Immuntherapie. Jedoch kommt sie noch viel zu selten zum Einsatz.

Hinter dieser Appendizitis steckte ein Erreger

23.04.2024 Appendizitis Nachrichten

Schmerzen im Unterbauch, aber sonst nicht viel, was auf eine Appendizitis hindeutete: Ein junger Mann hatte Glück, dass trotzdem eine Laparoskopie mit Appendektomie durchgeführt und der Wurmfortsatz histologisch untersucht wurde.

Ärztliche Empathie hilft gegen Rückenschmerzen

23.04.2024 Leitsymptom Rückenschmerzen Nachrichten

Personen mit chronischen Rückenschmerzen, die von einfühlsamen Ärzten und Ärztinnen betreut werden, berichten über weniger Beschwerden und eine bessere Lebensqualität.

Mehr Schaden als Nutzen durch präoperatives Aussetzen von GLP-1-Agonisten?

23.04.2024 Operationsvorbereitung Nachrichten

Derzeit wird empfohlen, eine Therapie mit GLP-1-Rezeptoragonisten präoperativ zu unterbrechen. Eine neue Studie nährt jedoch Zweifel an der Notwendigkeit der Maßnahme.

Update AINS

Bestellen Sie unseren Fach-Newsletter und bleiben Sie gut informiert.