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- W2912610157 abstract "For the past several Januaries,1Irwin R.S. Heffner J. Augustyn N. Frantsve-Hawley J. French C. Rice J. on behalf of the Editorial Leadership Team. Spread the word about CHEST in 2018: an updated website, a new section, and a look to the future.Chest. 2018; 153: 1-6Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (1) Google Scholar, 2Irwin R.S. Heffner J. Rice J. French C. Spread the word about CHEST for 2017: collaboration with Elsevier, publishing guidelines, more multimedia content, and changes for reviewers and authors.Chest. 2017; 151: 1-2Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (2) Google Scholar, 3Irwin R.S. Welch S.J. Rice J. French C.T. Spread the word about CHEST in 2016: an ever-rising impact factor, content innovations, launching a new partnership with Elsevier, and protecting the name and legacy of the journal.Chest. 2016; 149: 1-2Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (3) Google Scholar, 4Irwin R.S. Welch S.J. Rice J. French C.T. Spread the word about CHEST in 2015: rising impact factor, continuous innovations, and changes to the editorial team.Chest. 2015; 147: 1-2Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (4) Google Scholar, 5Irwin R.S. Welch S. Rice J. French C.T. Spread the word about the journal in 2014: measuring impact, improving search capability, saying goodbye and hello to section editors, honoring giants, and looking forward to a new visual identity.Chest. 2014; 145: 1-2Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (4) Google Scholar, 6Irwin R.S. Augustyn N. French C.T. Rice J. Tedeschi V. Welch S.J. on behalf of the Editorial Leadership Team. Spread the word about the journal in 2013: from citation manipulation to invalidation of patient-reported outcomes measures to renaming the clara cell to new journal features.Chest. 2013; 143: 1-4Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (21) Google Scholar, 7Irwin R.S. Augustyn N. French C.T. Rice J. Welch S.J. on behalf of the Editorial Leadership Team. Spread the word about the journal in 2012: from impact factor to plagiarism and image falsification detection software.Chest. 2012; 141: 1-4Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (3) Google Scholar, 8Irwin R.S. Augustyn N. on behalf of the Editorial Leadership Team. The Journal and 2011: a time for stocktaking.Chest. 2011; 139: 2-5Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (5) Google Scholar we have published an accounting of the achievements of the journal CHEST in the past year and a foretaste of our plans for the upcoming year. The first achievement we must highlight is that we continue to host and serve an outstanding group of authors, reviewers, editors, members, and readers. Without your contributions, your insights, your expertise, and your support, the Journal would not exist, much less enjoy the success we have experienced. We also must acknowledge the significant role played by our staff. The united efforts of these constituencies make it possible for CHEST to provide clinicians and researchers the high-quality information in pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine they need to serve their patients well. The current year impact factor for CHEST is 7.652, the highest in the Journal’s history. In addition, we are pleased to report CHEST’s Eigenfactor—a metric that weights citations from the most influential journals and eliminates self-citations—is the second best in both respiratory and critical care categories. In addition, third-party readership surveys by Kantar Media continue to show that CHEST remains the source of information most preferred by practicing pulmonologists. In the January 2018 issue of CHEST, we inaugurated a new series called “Better With Ultrasound.” Edited by Scott J. Millington, MD, and Seth J. Koenig, MD, FCCP, the series translates the building blocks of medical knowledge regarding the use of point-of-care ultrasonography to guide bedside procedures—such as pleural fluid drainage and central venous catheter insertions—into practical how-to articles. We think the series helps clinicians understand “the nuts and bolts of using unfamiliar tools.”9Millington S.J. Koenig S. Better with ultrasound: announcing a new “how-to” ultrasound series.Chest. 2018; 153: 12-13Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (4) Google Scholar Another exciting Journal development came not in its print editions but on our social media platforms, including Facebook and Twitter: social and multimedia content created and distributed by our new Web and Multimedia team and our recently expanded Social Media team. Our Web and Multimedia team—with Christopher L. Carroll, MD, FCCP, as editor and Yonatan Y. Greenstein, MD, FCCP, Roozehra Khan, DO, FCCP, and Dominique J. Pepper, MD, MBChB, MHSc, assisting—came out of the gate this year bursting with creative ideas. The first to be implemented is the infographics series. The Web and Multimedia team creates visual abstracts for two Original Research articles per month; these are posted online with the issue in which the articles are published and, we hope, will make even complex research more accessible, understandable, and appealing (Fig 1). We look forward to even more CHEST multimedia projects in this new year. Dr Carroll also oversees the efforts of Social Media Editors Kamran Boka, MD, Viren Kaul, MD, and Deep Ramachandran, MBBS. This team works with the CHEST Marketing and Communications staff to blog, tweet, and post about articles featured in the Journal. Social media promotes attention for, and prompts important dialogue among the community about, the groundbreaking content published in CHEST. The Journal’s commitment to disseminating clinically relevant and applicable information continues via the ongoing publication of CHEST guidelines. In the past year, the Journal published five guideline articles (Table 1).10Irwin R.S. French C.L. Chang A.B. Altman K.W. on behalf of the CHEST Expert Cough Panel. Classification of cough as a symptom in adults and management algorithms: CHEST guideline and expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 153: 196-209Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (197) Google Scholar, 11Field S.K. Escalante P. Fisher D.A. Ireland B. Irwin R.S. on behalf of the CHEST Expert Cough Panel. Cough due to TB and other chronic infections: CHEST guideline and expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 153: 467-497Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (28) Google Scholar, 12Mazzone P.J. Silvestri G.A. Patel S. et al.Screening for lung cancer: CHEST guideline and expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 153: 954-985Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (191) Google Scholar, 13Hill A.T. Barker A.F. Bolser D.C. et al.Treating cough due to non-CF and CF bronchiectasis with nonpharmacological airway clearance: CHEST expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 153: 986-993Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (14) Google Scholar, 14Chang A.B. Oppenheimer J.J. Rubin B.K. Weinberger M. Irwin R.S. on behalf of the CHEST Expert Cough Panel. Chronic cough related to acute viral bronchiolitis in children: CHEST expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 154: 378-382Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (4) Google Scholar, 15Lip G. Banerjee A. Boriani G. Chiang C. et al.Antithrombotic therapy for atrial fibrillation: CHEST guideline and expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 154: 1121-1201Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (585) Google Scholar The CHEST Guideline Oversight Committee has empaneled several subject matter experts to develop guidelines on topics of interest to the CHEST membership. Among the guidelines in process, several are in the works for 2019 publication, including two that appear in this issue (Table 2).Table 1Guidelines Articles Published in CHEST in 2018TitleAuthors“Classification of cough as a symptom in adults and management algorithms: CHEST Guideline and Expert Panel report”Irwin et al10Irwin R.S. French C.L. Chang A.B. Altman K.W. on behalf of the CHEST Expert Cough Panel. Classification of cough as a symptom in adults and management algorithms: CHEST guideline and expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 153: 196-209Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (197) Google Scholar“Cough due to TB and other chronic infections: CHEST Guideline and Expert Panel report”Field et al11Field S.K. Escalante P. Fisher D.A. Ireland B. Irwin R.S. on behalf of the CHEST Expert Cough Panel. Cough due to TB and other chronic infections: CHEST guideline and expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 153: 467-497Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (28) Google Scholar“Screening for lung cancer: CHEST Guideline and Expert Panel report”Mazzone et al12Mazzone P.J. Silvestri G.A. Patel S. et al.Screening for lung cancer: CHEST guideline and expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 153: 954-985Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (191) Google Scholar“Treating cough due to non-CF and CF bronchiectasis with nonpharmacological airway clearance: CHEST Expert Panel report”Hill et al13Hill A.T. Barker A.F. Bolser D.C. et al.Treating cough due to non-CF and CF bronchiectasis with nonpharmacological airway clearance: CHEST expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 153: 986-993Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (14) Google Scholar“Chronic cough related to acute viral bronchiolitis in children: CHEST Expert Panel report”Chang et al14Chang A.B. Oppenheimer J.J. Rubin B.K. Weinberger M. Irwin R.S. on behalf of the CHEST Expert Cough Panel. Chronic cough related to acute viral bronchiolitis in children: CHEST expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 154: 378-382Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (4) Google Scholar“Antithrombotic therapy for atrial fibrillation: CHEST Guideline and Expert Panel report”Lip et al15Lip G. Banerjee A. Boriani G. Chiang C. et al.Antithrombotic therapy for atrial fibrillation: CHEST guideline and expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 154: 1121-1201Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (585) Google Scholar Open table in a new tab Table 2Guidelines Articles Planned for Publication in CHEST in 2019TitleGuideline Chairs“Cryobiopsy in the treatment of interstitial lung disease”Yarmus L and Maldonado F“Treatment of stage I & II non-small cell lung cancer”Donington J“Screening for lung cancer: living guideline pilot”To be determined“Clinically diagnosing pertussis-associated cough in adults and children: CHEST Guideline and Expert Panel report”Moore A and Harnden A“Adult outpatients with acute cough due to suspected pneumonia or influenza: CHEST Guideline and Expert Panel report”Hill AT Open table in a new tab Reports of clinical trials and systematic reviews make up a goodly proportion of the Original Research articles published in CHEST. We would like to make prospective authors of such articles aware of the need to record their investigations in a viable registry (eg, ClinicalTrials.gov, PROSPERO [https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/]). In addition, and equally important, authors should update their registrations to reflect any changes in outcomes, including primary and secondary end points, or protocols before participants are enrolled. The methods described in the published report must accord with those previously published in the study registration to avoid even the appearance of scientific misconduct. Furthermore, any changes to the original registration (eg, substituting a secondary outcome as the primary outcome) should be described in detail in the methods section of the manuscript. We encourage authors who modify their methods to post those changes on the online registry before submitting their manuscripts to CHEST. CHEST’s online presence continues to grow in usage and features. The number of full-text articles viewed on chestjournal.org rose from 2.5 million in 2017 to 3.8 million in 2018. Full-text downloads of CHEST articles from ScienceDirect, Elsevier’s institutional subscription platform, increased from 1.2 million in 2016 to nearly 1.4 million in 2018. More than 400,000 full-text articles are viewed per month on our website and nearly 6,000 per month on our mobile app. In terms of our digital content, we offer a host of visual and interactive content that includes Ultrasound Corner; Critical Care, Pulmonary, and Sleep Pearls; podcasts; and our continuing series of video interviews with pioneering and trailblazing leaders in our field, Giants in Chest Medicine. Similar exciting content is coming in 2019, thanks to new additions to our section editors (as previously described). Sharing one’s published work is a privilege, prized among authors. The Journal, which owns the copyright for all of its content, and Elsevier, our publisher, permit CHEST authors to share their published articles with fellow clinicians and investigators, and with patients, in a way that does not violate copyright laws. This generous policy, however, is increasingly being flouted by some third-party organizations that directly solicit authors to upload their published articles to websites not endorsed or approved by CHEST. Unfortunately, some authors may not be aware that their engagement with these third-party companies represents a breach of intellectual property laws. An international consortium of scientific publishers is pursuing one such organization, the for-profit site ResearchGate, to prevent it from obtaining and distributing copyrighted material without the approval of organizations that hold the copyright. We encourage CHEST authors to recognize the legal implications of this activity and to notify the CHEST editorial office if they receive requests from such third-parties to upload their CHEST publications (editor@chestnet.org). For a full description of how to share your articles legally, please go to https://www.elsevier.com/authors/journal-authors/submit-your-paper#share. CHEST owes its volunteer reviewers a great deal of gratitude for their contributions to the science and scholarship in our field, and finding ways to express that gratitude is important to us. The Journal continues to encourage its reviewers to take advantage of the Journal’s relationship with Publons (www.publons.com), a website that collates a record of all a reviewer’s efforts. The existence of a completed review, not its content (which remains confidential), is noted in a reviewer’s record if the reviewer accepts the option in ScholarOne for the Journal to report the review to Publons. Some of our reviewers have taken advantage of this simple method of documenting their professional and academic contributions, and we hope that number will grow in 2019. Another opportunity to ensure one’s recognition for academic contributions involves a website called ORCiD (https://orcid.org/). ORCiD provides an enduring digital identifier that distinguishes a researcher from every other researcher. Once you register for your ORCiD number and begin appending it to manuscripts, grant applications, and the like, you will be linked automatically, accurately, and persistently with your professional activities. This registration allows PubMed, the National Institutes of Health, and other repositories for publications and other academic efforts to differentiate correctly and reliably among all the “John Smiths” of the world. Each year at the CHEST annual meeting, the Editor in Chief bestows the Soffer Award for Editorial Excellence on a person who has particularly distinguished himself or herself by contributing to the Journal’s superior quality. It was with great pleasure that Dr Irwin presented the 2018 Soffer award to Jean Rice, who retired in June 2018 from her long tenure as the Journal’s operations manager. As was announced in 2018, Richard S. Irwin will be stepping down as Editor in Chief of CHEST as of June 30, 2019. After a careful evaluation process conducted by a search committee that consisted of volunteers and staff from throughout CHEST, the organization’s Board of Regents appointed Peter J. Mazzone, MD, MPH, FCCP, as the Journal’s next Editor in Chief. Dr Mazzone directs the Lung Cancer Program and the Lung Cancer Screening Program at the Respiratory Institute of the Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio. He served as Program Chair of CHEST 2017 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and chaired the CHEST guideline panel on screening for lung cancer.12Mazzone P.J. Silvestri G.A. Patel S. et al.Screening for lung cancer: CHEST guideline and expert panel report.Chest. 2018; 153: 954-985Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (191) Google Scholar We look forward to ambitious and exciting developments when Dr Mazzone assumes his new position, which will begin July 1, 2019, with volume 156 of CHEST. The CHEST organization and the current CHEST editorial leadership team and staff are confident that the Journal will be in good hands with Dr Mazzone and the team he is assembling. The conclusion of Dr Irwin’s term is still several months away, and his efforts to expand and improve the Journal for the sake of our readers and the scholarly community will proceed unabated. CHEST holds a position of esteem and authority among pulmonary journals and, indeed, among medical journals at large. We hope that our authors will continue to contribute their best work to these pages and remain pledged to the Journal’s legacy of excellence. As always, we hope authors and readers alike will spread the word about CHEST. Thank you. *Editorial Leadership Team Contributors: We thank the Associate Editors: Peter J. Barnes, DM, Master FCCP; Christopher E. Brightling, MBBS, FCCP; Bruce L. Davidson, MD, MPH, FCCP; David D. Gutterman, MD, Master FCCP; Jesse B. Hall, MD, FCCP; Nicholas S. Hill, MD, FCCP; Robert G. Johnson, MD, Master FCCP; Scott Manaker, MD, PhD, FCCP; Reena Mehra, MD, FCCP; Joel Moss, MD, FCCP; Susan Murin, MD, FCCP; Paul M. O’Byrne, MBBCh, FCCP; Bruce K. Rubin, MD, FCCP; and Marvin I. Schwarz, MD, FCCP; Journal staff Barbara Anderson, Laura Lipsey, Carla Miller, Pamela Goorsky, and Robert Musacchio; and Elsevier staff Floris Dirk de Hon, Pamela Poppalardo, Kelly Adamitis, Cynthia Clark, Eileen Fournier, Michelle Nightlinger, Shelly Nuttall, Matthew Richardson, Nancy Rolya, Dan Schottenfeld, Adam Segal-Isaacson, and Matthew Tomasheski. Special thanks to Pamela Poppalardo and Pamela Goorsky for their editorial contributions and improvements to the manuscript of this article, and Jean Rice and Steve Welch for their expertise and past tireless efforts on behalf of the Journal." @default.
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