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© 2001 Online Journal of Issues in Nursing
Article published March, 2001 This article is one of a group of articles written in response to a call to online journal editors for manuscripts describing the evolution of their online journal. THE ONLINE Journal OF NURSING INFORMATICS (OJNI)Dee McGonigle, PhD, RNC, LCCE, FACCE |
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The journal and its editors have survived cyberbirth and introduced OJNI, first creeping, then walking, and now running. |
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Another aim of OJNI is to use the global power of cyberspace to create an electronic nursing informatics community providing accessible, relevant, and timely information about nursing informatics. |
OJNI was one of the first free nursing journals to be launched completely in an online environment. It is a peer-reviewed, scholarly journal available to anyone with access to the World Wide Web. Currently there are 3,100 global subscribers, representing 41 countries. These subscribers are students, healthcare professionals, and informatics experts representing the healthcare-related disciplines. In order to view the journal, one must have Internet access and enter the URL. At this time, there is no guest registry for sign-in. The OJNI site does not monitor or track usage and one does not need to be a subscriber to access the journal. OJNI's uniqueness emanates from dedicated editors, its nursing informatics focus, and its free access. The OJNI was awarded the distinction of Commended Site by the Medical Resource Reviews Database in May, 2000.
The journal is currently published with a staff of one, Dr. McGonigle. She hosts, maintains, and continues to serve as webdiva to the site. As Editor-in-Chief, a non-paid position, she launches each edition after the Editorial Board has reviewed all solicited or submitted Manuscripts. All of the Editors are volunteers dedicated to the aims and philosophy of the journal. They give not only of their precious time but also their hard-earned expertise. The survival of the OJNI is sustained through this expertise and dedication.Manuscripts are solicited through various nursing listservs and newsgroups, at speaking engagements, and professional meetings attended or provided by the Editors, other word of mouth resources and at the OJNI site. Manuscripts undergo a double-blind, peer review. A decision to publish is based upon the reviews. Currently, OJNI publishes approximately 20% of the manuscripts received; eleven of the 55 articles submitted have been published. As Hardy (1996) noted, one of the most difficult aspects of managing a journal is in locating articles worth publishing. The online journals are competing with print-based journals at a time when the academic world is slowly granting its acceptance of electronic scholarship. Burbules and Bruce (1995) predicted that electronic publishing would become more common and acknowledged as part of scholarship. The number of manuscripts received by OJNI has been increasing with each new edition. All submitted and/or invited manuscripts are retained by OJNI.
When the Editor-in-Chief receives a manuscript, it is logged in and all identification is stripped from the submission. This version of the submission is then sent to the appropriate Associate Editor along with a short list of previously approved and appropriate expert, content Reviewers. The Associate Editor then selects two Reviewers from the short list and sends copies of the submission for their blind review. The Associate Editor completes her own review, receives the comments from the content Reviewers, and forwards both the Editor and peer-reviewer comments along with the publishing decision to the Editor-in-Chief. The Editor-in-Chief contacts the author providing feedback concerning the review and publishing decision. It has also been a practice of the Editors, from the journal's inception, to invite nursing informatics experts to contribute articles for topic-focused editions of the journal. Each invited submission is also blind reviewed and recommended or rejected by the editorial staff. The founding Editors of OJNI agreed with Bailey (1994) that any author(s) should have control over their own material and maintain its copyright. Therefore, the author(s) retains the copyright of her or his own submission while the copyright for each entire edition is held by OJNI. All of the past editions are archived in space allocated by Penn State University. Each edition is assigned to a new web space so the entire edition is moved and remains available online. They are and will remain accessible to anyone.In cyberspace, the future is now and journal survival requires constant and continuous quality improvement. In future editions new segments such as `Tantalizing Talk About Technology', where our editorial staff will report to readers about the impact of technology on healthcare, and a new website review and evaluation segment where readers will be provided with newly found web sites on a wide range of topics relevant to nursing informatics, will be added. A student section, where students can submit papers for peer-reviewed publication with their faculty and also submit their faculty required web site critiques, is being developed. A joint venture is being negotiated to provide readers with free continuing education credits. Nurses who wish to learn more about Application Service Providers (ASP), Electronic Medical Record Systems (EMRS), and Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) should turn to the pages of the OJNI web site at the following URL: http://www.hhdev.psu.edu/nurs/ojni/index.htm. It is anticipated that future topics will include: ethics, educational preparation necessary for certification, practice settings and roles, innovative consulting practice, languages, visions of the future of nursing informatics, decision support systems, and the electronic medical record.
The future of OJNI is bright. As an evolving journal, it is our intention to continue to cultivate and enhance OJNI, establishing and nurturing this cybercommunity of shared nursing informatics expertise.Dee McGonigle is the Editor-in-Chief of OJNI, the President of Educational Advancement Associates and an Associate Professor of Nursing and Information Sciences & Technology at Penn State University. She is interested in the educational impact of the human-technology interface. Dr. McGonigle is committed to the insightful analysis of ethical dilemmas brought on by this volatile information age. Her current area of interest is in the ethical implementation of the care management process and healthcare informatics.
Rosalee Seymour is the Editor-in-Charge of Education and Informatics for OJNI and has taught various courses throughout her 35 year nursing career, including psychiatric, research, teaching/learning, rural health, issues, and theory. Dr. Seymour is currently at East Tennessee State University where she teaches both rural health and informatics. She is a past Executive Director for the Delaware Board of Nursing. Dr. Seymour was a delegate to ANA convention in 2000. Her research interests are evidence based care, meta-analyses, and teaching/learning.
Sheila Englebardt, PhD, RN, CNA
Sheila P. Englebardt is the Editor-in-Charge of Nursing Administration and Instructional Technology for OJNI. She is a Clinical Associate Professor and Director of the Center for Instructional Technology and Educational Support at the School of Nursing of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She teaches Health Care Informatics online in the Health Care Systems master's program. Sheila is particularly interested in the use of technology to inform administrative decision making and in the potential of the Internet and the World Wide Web for student and consumer education.
Maureen Allen is the Editor-in-Charge of Patient Education and Internet-based Continuing Education for OJNI . She is the Research Director at Clinical Tools. She has worked with the company since 1995. Her experience includes developing materials for the Internet for families, patients and health professionals. She was the principle investigator on CTI's project "Living with Parkinson's Disease: An Interactive CD-ROM". Ms. Allen has her Master's degree in Public Health (Epidemiology) and is currently working on her doctorate at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health.
Betty Chang, DNSc, RN, FNP, FAAN
Betty L. Chang is Editor-in-Charge of Research and International Issues for OJNI. She is currently a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her clinical area is gerontology, and she teaches courses on the philosophical foundations of science development, educational seminars, and complementary therapies. Dr. Chang is the chair-elect of the working group on Consumer Health Informatics at the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA), and Departmental Editor for the Western Journal of Nursing Research.
Bailey, C. (1994). Scholarly electronic publishing on the Internet, the NREN, and the NII: Charting Possible Futures. Serials Review, 20 (3): 7-16. Available online at http://info.lib.uh.edu/cwb/schpub.htm accessed on August 24, 2000.
Burbules, N. & Bruce, B. (1995). This is not a paper. Available online http://www.ed.uiuc.edu/facstaff/burbules/ncb/papers/paper.1.html accessed on August 24, 2000.
Hardy, T. (1996). Starting an electronic journal in law, BILETA '96 Conference Proceedings, 3 The Journal of Information, Law and Technology (JILT). Available online at http://elj.warwick.ac.uk/elj/jilt/bileta/1996/3hardy/ accessed on August 24, 2000.
Harnad, S. (1995). Implementing peer review on the Net: Scientific quality control (excerpt). Available online at http://www.cudenver.edu/~mryder/peer/harnad95.html accessed on August 24, 2000.
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