Critical care medicine is a rapidly expanding hospital speciality, taking an increasingly important place at the centre of acute hospital care1. A vast amount of data is generated during patient care, but systematically accessing and analysing this information has always been a challenge, with much of it being wasted and never shared widely2. A general underreporting of research and data in the medical literature is partly to blame for this waste as much good-quality science, including negative results or small studies, are never published3–5. Even those findings that do get published can often only be shared after a lengthy publishing process; the need for faster access to research findings is particularly evident in public health crises6 but is pertinent to acute care in general.
By launching a new channel in F1000Research that focuses on all areas of critical care, we offer the community a new platform for sharing new research and debate without barriers, making it easier for busy clinicians and researchers to write up their findings quickly and make them available, ultimately helping other physicians improve the care of patients with life-threatening injuries and illnesses.
F1000Research operates a unique post-publication peer review model that allows authors to take charge of their own publications: Submitted articles (Research, Methods, Clinical Practice Articles and so on) are published quickly once they have passed a basic suitability check, which covers issues such as ethical approval. Peer review by invited experts takes place openly after publication, with referees being named and their reports being published. Authors can address any criticisms by publishing a revised version, and all articles that pass peer review are listed in PubMed and other bibliographic databases.
The Critical Care channel welcomes research across the broad field of acute care and emergency medicine, including all aspects of critical cardiovascular, respiratory, renal and gastro-intestinal problems, neurological and metabolic complications, pediatric critical care, sepsis and multiple organ failure.
Research into, and discussions of, ethical and organisational challenges in critical care, as well as advances in techniques and equipment are also encouraged. In order to address the current publication bias towards ‘exciting’ and ‘positive’ research, we welcome confirmatory studies or negative results, as long as they are supported with original data and sufficient methodological details that make it possible for others to repeat the analysis if they wish.
As a special service to the community, the Critical Care channel includes short F1000 Faculty Critiques, which are commissioned from F1000 Faculty Members, who evaluate the current evidence-based literature with the aim to help readers understand whether a specific recent study is likely to change clinical practice.
Finally, an archive of posters and slides that were presented at the various annual International Symposia on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine (ISICEM) is also available as part of the channel.
I hope that the channel will create lively debate and entice you to share your research and insights – big and small – so the critical care community can benefit from your experience!
Competing interests
No competing interests were disclosed.
Grant information
The author(s) declared that no grants were involved in supporting this work.
F1000 recommendedReferences
Comments on this article Comments (0)