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African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7 May 2009 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA James K Tumwine, MD, PhD Editor in Chief, African Health Sciences Makerere University, College of Health Scienes Kampala Uganda: [email protected] ; [email protected]

African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

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Page 1: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda

Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7 May 2009

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

James K Tumwine, MD, PhDEditor in Chief, African Health SciencesMakerere University, College of Health ScienesKampala Uganda: [email protected]; [email protected]

Page 2: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Many thanks

• African Journals project• For support and sponsorship

• Colleagues on the project • Malawi, Ethiopia, Zambia, Ghana, Mali, Uganda

• Our “twin” partners

• Other supporters – ScholarOne, etc

Page 3: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Menu

Introduction

The story

End

Page 4: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

African Health Sciences: structure

a. EIC and 1editor

b. Three editorial staff a. 1 paid

b. 2 voluntary

c. Editorial board (11 members.)

Page 5: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Many are involved in teaching, research, and patient care

Page 6: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Where HIV/AIDS, malaria and other infections

• With background of poverty

• Increases burden on– families– communities– health service

Page 7: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Manuscript submission and review

1. From January 2008, manuscript submission and the review process are online – Manuscript Central supported by ScholarOne

2. All manuscripts are reviewed by at least two reviewers;

1. one from Uganda and one from outside Uganda

Page 8: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Frequency of publication, dissemination, and print edition circulation

• AHS is a quarterly publication– March, June, September and December

Page 9: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Open access

1. Available both in print and electronic forms

2. Print copies by MERA through out Africa. a. 12500 copies per issue free of charge

3. Locally printed copies (500)

Page 10: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Online

• Indexed on Medline/PubMed

• Archived in PubMed Central

• African Journal’s Online

• BIOLINE and HINARI (free)

Page 11: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Some sites where you can access African Health Sciences

• www.bioline.org/ahs• www.mc.manuscriptcentral.com/mums.ahs• www.ajol.info• HINARI• PUBMED• PUBMED CENTRAL

Page 12: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Information on usage

• Print copy circulation 12500+500 = 13000 per issue

• Online access

Page 13: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

African HealthSciences hits per month on Bioline, Jan 2006 – March 2009

• .

02000400060008000

100001200014000160001800020000

1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39

Month

Hit

s p

er

mo

nth

2006 2007 2008Y09

Page 14: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

African Health Sciences requests for abstracts and full articles per month on

Bioline, Jan 2006 – March 2009

0

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

7000

8000

1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37

Month

Hit

s abs

req

Page 15: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

African HealthSciences hits per month and reason on Bioline, Jan 2006 – March 2009

0200400600800

1000120014001600

1 4 7 10 13 16 19 22 25 28 31 34 37

Months

Vis

ito

rs

home

toc

titles

Page 16: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Young writer’s workshop participants reviewing manuscripts

• .

Page 17: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

African Health Sciences manuscripts: receipt and acceptance 2006-2008

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

Y2006 Y2007 Y2008

Year

Man

usc

rip

ts

Received

Accepted

Page 18: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Overall business and financial structure

• Tenuous

• ? Charge authors

• Raising funds (local and abroad)

Page 19: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Writers workshops are extremely popular with our young scientists

• .

Page 20: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Our aim is not to become

The Lancet,

NEJM,

JAMA

EHPS

Annals or

BMJ

Page 21: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

No

• We have clear priorities

Page 22: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

To nurture this partnership

• Together with our partners

• To achieve a common goal

Page 23: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

You see, this pot is used to keep lopinavir/ritonavir (kaletra) cool

• .

• as only <5% of Ugandans have electricity in their homes

Page 24: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

To keep COOL effective medicines vs infections such as HIV, critical for the

survival of our people

Page 25: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Thinking

outside the box

has shaped and guided our strategy

for making health information

available to our scientists

Page 26: African Health Sciences: The story of a young journal from Uganda Report submitted to African Journal project meeting, Council for Science Editors, 1-7

Thank you

• Asante sana!