C Fielder Camm1, A John Camm2. 1. Radcliffe Department of Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. 2. St. Georges University of London, Cranmer Terrace, London, UK.
The case report is perhaps the oldest form of medical publication. Reports on specific
patients date back at least to the 2nd millennium BCE, and until the 20th century, case
reports were considered a mainstay of clinical research. Indeed, many diseases and syndromes still bear witness to the
influence of case reports and case series on the medical lexicon. With the rise of more
advanced research techniques, case reports rightly no longer exhibit the same power in guiding
medical practice they once did; however, they still have an important part to play in medical
practice.This issue marks the launch of European Heart Journal – Case Reports
(EHJ-CR). This new open access journal joins the rest of the European
Society of Cardiology (ESC) family and aims to broaden the society’s coverage of medical
publishing by providing a dedicated repository for case reports, case series, cardiac images
and local quality improvement projects (QIPs) of wider significance. Case reports can be
submitted directly to the journal (via https://academic.oup.com/ehjcr) or transferred from one of the other members of
the ESC journal family.Much of the continuing importance of case reports as a publication format comes from their
role in educating junior clinicians in the technique of writing, editing, and submitting
manuscripts for review and publication. Further, case reports should have a specific structure
and a simple message making the review process ideal for educating more senior clinicians with
limited experience of undertaking peer review. To this end, EHJ-CR has been
launched with a mandate to be an education platform to help develop the skills of current and
future clinician researchers. The EHJ-CR is intended to assist members of the
young cardiology groups within the ESC and its associations in gaining publishing, reviewing,
and editing experience.The junior reviewer programme developed by the EHJ-CR forms the centre point
for the education efforts. Clinicians either in specialty training or within 5 years of
completion with some research experience have been recruited to join this programme. Articles
published within the EHJ-CR will be reviewed by both a junior reviewer from
this programme and a senior experienced reviewer. This process has two main benefits. The
junior reviewer will have their review scrutinized by his/her senior colleague and feedback
will be provided. This provides a learning experience for the reviewer. Further, given the
relatively junior authorship of many case reports, this ensures that the peer-review process
is truly undertaken by close peers to the manuscript authors. Those that successfully
participate as junior reviews will be accredited for their work and contribution to the
journal.An important feature of the EHJ-CR is the aim to publish high-quality,
well-written, and researched case reports. However, truly unique, one-of-a-kind, case reports
are increasingly rare. Although these remain important and interesting, this journal will not
be limited to these alone. Indeed, case reports of relatively common conditions will be
considered if they demonstrate beautiful instructive images or an interesting/important
learning point.Other article types that are similarly undertaken in large part by more junior clinicians
will also be published by the EHJ-CR. Quality improvement projects form a
vital element of institutional management. Good QIPs are often a labour-intensive process,
which can reveal important lessons for clinical practice. They are often undertaken by junior
clinicians with limited scope to share their findings and improve outcomes outside their local
institution. The EHJ-CR intends to publish high-quality QIPs with a message
that may be of widespread benefit.The EHJ-CR intends to utilize multimedia elements as a central component of
the journal. Taking an experimental perspective, the journal will be a pilot vehicle for novel
social media approaches to publishing for the ESC journal family. The journal will aim to
publish slide shows with each case report and develop podcasts to discuss particular case
reports in greater detail. Case reports involving complex multidisciplinary management will be
published as ‘grand rounds’ with increase word and figure limits to allow for complete
discussion of the case complexity.We continue to see the case report as an important aspect of medical publications, no longer
as the driver of medical practice but as a format with significant educational promise. The
EHJ-CR, as the home of the cardiology case report will help ensure the
educational benefit of publishing is developed and improved for all clinicians involved in the
research or management of cardiac patients and pathology.Conflict of interest: None declared.
Authors: F Aaysha Cader; Sabeeda Kadavath; Louise Segan; Nafisa El Sammani; Paola Morejon-Barragan; Sarah Maria Birkhoelzer Journal: Eur Heart J Case Rep Date: 2021-03-09