Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-45l2p Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T08:31:21.668Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

From the Editor's desk

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2013 

A good read

This is my last ‘From the Editor's Desk’ and so thought it would be a good opportunity to give you a frank report about my aims and performance as editor over the past 10 years. When I became Editor in July 2003 I set myself a set of eight targets; I wanted the Journal ‘to be both topical and learned, to have both immediate and long-term impact, to appeal equally to the busy clinician and the earnest researcher, and to be both serious and entertaining.’ Reference Tyrer1 It is for others to decide whether I have succeeded or not, but we do have one set of (not entirely satisfactory) metrics that aids this a little. Topicality and immediate impact are measured by the immediacy factor – the number of times an article is cited in the year of its publication. Our 2012 immediacy factor is 1.87, a rise of 71% since 2003, so here we are hitting home. Measures of learnedness are much more difficult, but the impact factor – the citation rate in the 2 years after publication – still holds sway, and our current impact factor of 6.61 has risen 60% in the same period. But the long-term impact is perhaps even more important. The 5-year impact factor was introduced in 2007 and ours has increased by 17% since then, and the Journal's cited half-life, the median age of items cited in the relevant year, has increased by 53% in the past 10 years, and is now higher than almost every other psychiatric journal. Appeal is much more difficult to measure, and the statistics I have just given you will leave some readers critically looking at each other like one of James Thurber's rapacious women complaining to another about her husband in a cartoon, ‘He doesn't know anything except facts’. The busy clinician has become even busier, and probably more distractible, in the past 10 years as even more facts have to be extracted from them by demanding services, Reference Johnson, Osborn, Araya, Wearn, Paul and Stafford2 but at least in 2004 they were reading the Journal fairly often, Reference Jones, Hanney, Buxton and Burns3 and I hope they still are. I also think researchers are getting to like the Journal better, although as I have to reject more than 6 times the papers that I accept, I get a somewhat biased post-bag. But at least the threats I receive are getting nicer, and sometimes I get messages of unadulterated ecstasy when I accept a paper. I have tried very hard to maintain a high standard of science, and although doubtless some will feel I have failed at times, the colleagues I rely on to ‘tell me like it really is’ have reinforced this view.

So where is the Journal going now? Of course this is up to the new Editor, not yet known at the time of writing, but if I had to hazard a guess I suspect that the following will feature even more prominently in our pages: neurocognition in all its aspects (Joyce, pp. ; Choi et al, pp. ); Reference Fontes, Bolla, Cunha, Almeida, Jungerman and Laranjeira4,Reference Owen5 public mental health in both national and international contexts (Kohrt, pp. ; Betancourt et al, pp. ; Chen et al, pp. ); Reference Bhui and Dinos6,Reference Kohrt, Hruschka, Worthman, Kunz, Baldwin and Upadhaya7 as well as much more understanding and cost-effective treatment of common mental and personality disorders (Bateman & Fonagy, pp. ; Moran & Crawford, pp. ). Reference Barrett and Byford8Reference Lewis, Pearce and Bisson10 But of course those who had read my first editorial would expect this. I wrote then that ‘I do not want the subjects in which I am especially interested as a researcher – personality disorder and risk, classification and treatment of common mental disorders, trials of complex interventions and public mental health – to be unfairly represented in accepted publications’, Reference Tyrer1 and although I have said repeatedly to myself that I am lacking in any form of bias, I have to admit, as I did last month, that the Editor's prejudice is, and probably always will be, final. Reference Tyrer11 I leave the heading of this piece to the end; I am sorry, but the Journal is still not a good read. There are lighter touches, as the extras editors have valiantly attempted to introduce, but the bulk of the journal is still not something to take to bed with you, even though some may read it in their baths. Reference Tyrer12 I have not succeeded in making the Journal both serious and entertaining; I hope the new Editor will do better.

A parting glass

I also said in my first editorial that a good editor has no friends. Reference Tyrer1 This is why, and it adds some sympathy and solace for my enemies.

The Editor

No friends has he

Only supplicants

With fantastic offerings

Too good to turn away

But stony hearted he must judge

No favours shown, all kindness shunned

Dissected content disembodied from its source

Equal scrutiny for merit, pertinence and blunder

If thumbs go down, or what seems new is old

The goodbye message is composed

And here is where kindness can intrude

As refusal like an uppercut

Can bring resolve crashing to the floor

All desire to publish gone

So softly, softly, guides the pen

To find another pathway past despond

To rise again another day

But plus and minus still equals nought

And those who cajole or flatter must remain

Only supplicants

No friends has he

The Editor

References

1 Tyrer, P. Entertaining eminence in the British Journal of Psychiatry . Br J Psychiatry 2003; 183: 12.Google Scholar
2 Johnson, S., Osborn, DP, Araya, R., Wearn, E., Paul, M., Stafford, M., et al Morale in the English mental health workforce: questionnaire survey. Br J Psychiatry 2012; 201: 239–46.Google Scholar
3 Jones, T., Hanney, S., Buxton, M., Burns, T. What British psychiatrists read: questionnaire survey of journal usage among clinicians. Br J Psychiatry 2004; 185: 251–7.Google Scholar
4 Fontes, MA, Bolla, KI, Cunha, PJ, Almeida, PP, Jungerman, F., Laranjeira, RR, et al Cannabis use before age 15 and subsequent executive functioning. Br J Psychiatry 2011; 198: 442–7.Google Scholar
5 Owen, MJ. Intellectual disability and major psychiatric disorders: a continuum of neurodevelopmental causality. Br J Psychiatry 2012; 200: 268–9.Google Scholar
6 Bhui, K., Dinos, S. Preventive psychiatry: a paradigm for population mental health. Br J Psychiatry 2012; 198: 417–9.Google Scholar
7 Kohrt, BA, Hruschka, DJ, Worthman, CM, Kunz, RD, Baldwin, JL, Upadhaya, N., et al Political violence and mental health in Nepal: prospective study. Br J Psychiatry 2012; 201: 268–75.Google Scholar
8 Barrett, B., Byford, S. Costs and outcomes of an intervention programme for offenders with personality disorders. Br J Psychiatry 2012; 200: 336–41.Google Scholar
9 Kumsta, R., Sonuga-Barke, E., Rutter, M. Adolescent callous-unemotional traits and conduct disorder in adoptees exposed to severe early deprivation. Br J Psychiatry 2012; 200: 197201.Google Scholar
10 Lewis, C., Pearce, J., Bisson, JI. Efficacy, cost-effectiveness and acceptability of self-help interventions for anxiety disorders: systematic review. Br J Psychiatry 2012; 200: 1521.Google Scholar
11 Tyrer, P. From the Editor's Desk. Br J Psychiatry 2013; 203: 160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
12 Tyrer, P. From the Editor's Desk. Br J Psychiatry 2008; 192: 82.Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.