
Psychiatric News January 7, 2005
Volume 40 Number 1
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
p. 27
Prestigious Research Journal Gets New Parents
Joan Arehart-Treichel
As of this month, the Schizophrenia Bulletin has a new
publisher. It will retain some of the characteristics that have been its
strong suit and will add some new ones.
One of the world's premier schizophrenia journalsthe
Schizophrenia Bulletinhas changed hands.
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) has turned its publication
over to the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center and Oxford University
Press.
NIMH announced last spring that it intended to stop publishing the
Bulletin and that it was looking for a new publisher for it. The
principal reason, NIMH Director Thomas Insel, M.D., indicated in a prepared
statement, was to ease the journal's transition to an electronic format.
"The Bulletin has served its original purposes well, but in
this `electronic age,' the institute needs to consider new ways to inform
scientists, clinicians, patients and families, and the general public about
schizophrenia research findings."
A number of organizations in both North America and Europe, including
American Psychiatric Publishing Inc., applied for the job. Review of
applications took place during the summer. On September 14, Insel announced
via the NIMH Web site that NIMH had "selected a collaborative proposal
from Oxford University Press and Maryland Psychiatric Research Center to
assume publishing responsibilities, beginning with the 2005-dated issues...
and is confident that the Bulletin will be in very good
hands."
With this change, William Carpenter Jr., M.D., a professor of psychiatry at
the University of Maryland and director of the Maryland Psychiatric Research
Center, will become editor in chief of the Bulletin and a group of
highly respected scientists will serve as associate editors, including Gunvant
Thaker, M.D., and Paul Shepard, Ph.D., of the Maryland Psychiatric Research
Center; Wayne Fenton, M.D., and Daniel Weinberger, M.D., of NIMH; Charles
Schulz, M.D., of the University of Minnesota; Susan Essock, Ph.D., of Mount
Sinai School of Medicine; and Robin Murray, M.D., of the Institute of
Psychiatry in London.
"The Bulletin will fill a special niche," Carpenter
said. "We want to do well with the things that have traditionally been
the journal's strong suit, and this includes theme issuesfor example,
new treatments for schizophrenia; high-quality critical reviews of
topicssay, a review of the effect of stigma; and reports from workshops
such as the current NIMH MATRICS reports on cognition in schizophrenia. We
will continue special features such as first-person accounts and cover artwork
from people with schizophrenia.
"At the same time we'll be introducing some new features. We want to
tell good translational research stories that are understandable by a broad
audience of clinicians, not just by schizophrenia researchers. We want to be
the journal that basic neuroscientists read to learn about the illness and the
place for the broad readership to learn about the neuroscience of
schizophrenia."
More information about the Schizophrenia Bulletin is posted
online at
<www.schizophreniabulletin.oupjournals.org>.
Get information about faster international access.
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