New #OpenAccess Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control (ARIC) Journal Publishes First Papers


Andreas Voss, Jan Kluytmans and Didier Pittet have successfully started a new international, open-access journal called Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control (ARIC). The first batch of papers were just posted today to the ARIC website.  This event is a significant for several reasons.

The first, as I've mentioned before, is that as an open-access journal, ARIC will allow unaffiliated scientists, the general public and otherwise interested parties free full access immediately upon publication without having to wait years or pay high fees. In an editorial, accompanying the first publications, the editors highlight their views of open access including how they hope to respond to the high initial costs for authors.

They write: "ARIC's choice of "open-access" is a logical step towards its goal to be truly international and to allow the transfer of knowledge and best practices to even remote places that cannot afford printed journals. We realize that open access has financial consequence for some authors and that the standard BioMed Central rules to waive article-processing charges may not be enough. BioMed Central provides an automatic waiver to authors based in any country classified by the World Bank as low-income or lower-middle-income economies, but we intend to find solutions in the near future that will allow us to support authors from upper-middle income countries and young investigators" 

The second and I think equally important reason that ARIC's emergence is important is that we've never had an international voice in infection control. As the 1200 attendees from 84 countries at last summers ICPIC meeting can attest, international collaboration will be the key for controlling antimicrobial-resistant bacterial pathogens (think NDM-1) in the future.


I wish the editors and the ARIC journal much luck and future success!

@eliowa

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