Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
Tony Delamothe Within the next few weeks, the BMJ expects to join three separate
initiatives, which together will make more of the journal available to
many more people. It will be the first general medical journal to join
PubMed Central, a project masterminded by the US National Institutes of
Health to make the results of original research in the life sciences
freely available to everyone via the internet (BMJ 1999;318:1637-8).
Electronic versions of research articles will be transferred to the
National Institutes of Health at the same time as they are published on
the BMJ's website. PubMed Central will be integrated with PubMed,
Medline's electronic interface. Researchers will be able to access the
full text of studies either from PubMed Central or by following links
back to the BMJ's website.
As now, users will need to visit the journal's website for related
editorials, commentaries, and rapid responses and to print out copies
of the article that look like those in the paper journal.
The BMJ is set to inaugurate the medical collection of JSTOR, whose
goal is "to benefit all parties in the field of scholarly communication by providing centralised storage and archiving of important journals in electronic form." In the BMJ's case, this means digitising all the journals between 1840 and December 1993 (when
the BMJ's own online archive begins).
JSTOR, a not-for-profit organisation set up by the Andrew W Mellon
Foundation in 1995, has already assembled a collection of 117 journals
in the humanities and social sciences.
The electronic versions are created at no costs to the journals;
revenue comes from library subscribers By contrast, WorldSpace wants to make the most recent issue of the BMJ
freely available to health professionals responsible for the health
care of the world's most disadvantaged people.
The company was founded "to provide direct satellite delivery of
digital audio communications and multimedia services to the emerging
world" and depends on satellites to deliver signals to portable
receivers (costing about £150 ($250) each).
Although WorldSpace is a commercial company, it has set aside 5%of the
satellite's capacity for good works.
currently nearly 500 worldwide.
Read all Rapid Responses