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International Agreement to Expand PubMed Central

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National Institutes of Health
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 25, 2004

National Library of Medicine
Robert Mehnert
Kathy Cravedi
(301) 496-6308
publicinfo@nlm.nih.gov

Additional medical journals, some dating back more than 125 years, will be made freely available on the Internet.

The Wellcome Trust, in partnership with the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC), and the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM) are joining forces to digitize the complete backfiles of a number of important and historically significant medical journals. The digitized content will be made freely available on the Internet – via PubMed Central (http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/) and augment the content already available there.

With funding of £1.25 million [£750,000 from the Trust, £500,000 from the JISC] the project plans to digitize around 1.7 million pages of text. The NLM, a part of the National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, will manage the project, host the archive, and ensure that the digital files are preserved in perpetuity.

The list of journals to be digitized will include the Annals of Surgery, Biochemical Journal, Journal of Physiology and Medical History. Digitization will commence in Summer 2004 and the first titles will be online early in 2005.

Once the backfiles are digitized, a significant new body of medical literature will be freely available on the Internet. Examples include:

In addition to creating a digital copy of every page in the backfiles, the digitization process will also create a PDF file for every discrete item (article, editorial, letter, advertisements etc.) in the archive, and use optical character recognition (OCR) technology to generate searchable text.

Although the project focuses on digitizing backfiles, publishers will also include new issues of the selected journals on an ongoing basis subject to an embargo period, as defined by each participating publisher.

Dr Mark Walport, Director of the Wellcome Trust, warmly welcomed the project and said: “This international partnership will create an invaluable historic archive which will provide fascinating insights for today’s research, teaching and clinical communities worldwide. This project is in close accord with the Trust’s declared position on the desirability of open access to scientific literature”.

“This is a major step in our continuing effort to preserve and freely make available an important segment of medical literature” said Donald A.B Lindberg, M.D., Director of the National Library of Medicine. “The project is an example of truly useful international collaboration for the benefit of all.”

Professor Sir Graeme Catto, President of the General Medical Council and Vice Principal of King’s College London (host of JISC’s London office), welcomed the announcement, saying: “I am delighted that the JISC-NLM-Wellcome Trust project will enable users to have free access to the back files of some of the UK’s and US’s most significant medical journals through PubMed Central. This innovative project will have important implications for the learning, teaching and research communities, but its commitment to open access will mean it has great importance beyond the education world too.”

The Medical Journals Backfiles Digitisation Project is one of six digitization projects with funding for the Higher Education Funding Council (HEFCE). The overall program, being managed by JISC, represents a total investment of some £10m to be applied to delivering high quality content online, including sound, moving pictures, census data and still images for long-term use by the further and higher education communities in the UK.

Further information about this project can be found at: http://library.wellcome.ac.uk/backfiles.

Contacts:

Robert Kiley
Wellcome Library – Head of Systems Strategy
Tel: 020 7611 8338
Email r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk

Stuart Dempster
JISC Programme Manager
Tel: 020 7848 2564
Email: s.dempster@jisc.ac.uk

Wellcome Trust media contact:
Barry Gardner:
Tel: 020 7611 7329.
Email: b.gardner@wellcome.ac.uk

JISC media contact:
Dr Philip Pothen
JISC Communication Manager
Tel: 020 7848 2935
Email: p.pothen@jisc.ac.uk

NLM media contact:
Bob Mehnert
Office of Communications and Public Liaison
Tel: 301 496 6308
Email: mehnert@nlm.nih.gov

Notes to Editors

1. The Wellcome Library exists as a resource to provide access to the documentary record of medicine. The Medical Journals Backfiles Digitisation Project is one way of translating that vision into the digital age.

2. The Wellcome Trust is an independent, research funding charity, established under the will of Sir Henry Wellcome in 1936. The Trust’s mission is to foster and promote research with the aim of improving human and animal health.

3. The JISC – Joint Information Systems Committee – is a committee of all UK further and higher education funding bodies, and is responsible for supporting the innovative use of information and communication technology (ICT) to support learning, teaching and research. It is best known for providing the JANET network, a range of support, content and advisory services, and a portfolio of high-quality resources. Information about JISC, its services and programmes can be found at http://www.jisc.ac.uk/

4. Located in Bethesda, Maryland, the U.S. National Library of Medicine, the world's largest library of the health sciences, is a component of the National Institutes of Health, Department of Health & Human Services.

5. Annals of Surgery, published by Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins is the world’s most highly referenced surgery journal with an impact factor (1992) of 6.073. Annals of Surgery web site.

6. The Biochemical Journal, published by Portland Press the wholly owned publishing subsidiary of the Biochemical Society is a major international journal. It is widely cited and is a core journal for any biomedical library collection. Biochemical Journal web site.

7. The Journal of Physiology, published by Blackwells’ on behalf of the Physiological Society (London) retains its prominent position as the journal of choice for the publication of original peer-reviewed science covering all areas of physiology. The Institute of Scientific Information (ISI) 2002 impact factor of 4.650 is consistent with the role of the Journal of Physiology as the key journal for papers reporting high quality original science with a rapid influence on physiology. Journal of Physiology web site.

8. Published by the Wellcome Trust, Medical History is the premier British journal of the history of medicine. Its objective is to broaden and deepen the understanding of medicine, in the widest sense, by historical studies of high quality. Medical History web site.

9. Guidelines for depositing and providing unrestricted access to current journal issues can be found at: <http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/about/guidelines.html>.

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Last updated: 25 June 2004
First published: 25 June 2004
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