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CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL

The '''Canadian Medical Association Journal''' (CMAJ) is a general medical journal that is published biweekly by the Canadian Medical Association (CMA).
It is considered to be one of the top six general medical journals; the others being the ''New England Journal of Medicine'', the ''Journal of the American Medical Association'', ''The Lancet'', ''British Medical Journal'', and the ''Annals of Internal Medicine''.

Contents
Notable publications
Free access
Controversy about editorial independence
Editorial Fellowship
History
References
See also
External links

Notable publications


The CMAJ published Banting and Best's 1922 report, Pancreatic extracts in the treatment of diabetes mellitus.[1]

Free access


CMAJ is the only one of the 6 major general medical journals to have the entire electronic version of the journal free online from date of publication. The historical archives are also free online. The other major journals allow free access to limited content or to content of a specified age.
CMAJ does not have authorship or page charges.

Controversy about editorial independence


On February 20 2006, John Hoey, the last long-standing editor, was fired over an editorial independence dispute with the then owners of the CMAJ, CMA Media.
The CMAJ sent 13 women to buy the emergency contraceptive levonorgestrel (Plan B) over-the-counter in pharmacies across Canada, and report their experiences. The pharmacists asked them for personal data, including the woman's name, address, date of last menstrual period, when she had unprotected sex, customary method of birth control, and reason for dispensing the medication. This was at the recommendation of the Canadian Pharmacists Association, which also advised members to store the information permanently in their computers. The Canadian Women's Health Network said that collecting this information was unnecessary and a violation of privacy. [2] The Canadian Pharmacists Association complained to the Canadian Medical Association, demanding that the names of the pharmacists be removed from the article. The Canadian Medical Association ordered the CMAJ to comply.[3] The Canadian Medical Association then fired Hoey, without giving a reason.
On February 28 2006, the acting-editor, Stephen Choi and editorial fellow Sally Murray, resigned from journal over the same reason leaving it without any full-time editorial staff, which raised questions about the future of the publication.[4]
[5]
In April 2007, the former staff at CMAJ launched a new open-access journal, Open Medicine[6].

Editorial Fellowship


CMAJ hires young "editorial interns" every year, for one year. These interns help to write and edit articles, among other duties. The editorial intern program has proven popular.[7]

History


The CMAJ was established in 1911.

References


1. Pancreatic extracts in the treatment of diabetes mellitus, , , , Canad Med Assoc J, 1922
2. CMAJ
3. CMAJ
4. John Hoey, Editorial Independence and the Canadian Medical Association Journal, N Engl J Med, 354:1982-1983 (May 11, 2006)
5. CBC: Canadian Medical Association Journal loses two more editors. CBC News, March 1 2006. [1]
6. BMJ 2007;334:870 (28 April), News: Former staff at CMAJ launch open access journal, David Spurgeon
7. Editorial Fellowship. CMAJ Web Site. Available at: http://www.cmaj.ca/misc/fellowship.shtml. Accessed on March 5 2006.

See also



List of journals available free online

★ ''The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics''

External links



Canadian Medical Association Journal

About CMAJ

Canadian Medical Association
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