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2 months ago |
annfammed.org | Sarina B. Schrager |Dean A. Seehusen |Sumi M. Sexton |Caroline Richardson
Use of AI in Family Medicine Publications: A Joint Editorial From Journal Editors Sarina Schrager, Dean A. Seehusen, Sumi Sexton, Caroline R. Richardson, Jon Neher, Nicholas Pimlott, Marjorie A. Bowman, José Rodríguez, Christopher P.
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Jan 22, 2025 |
cfp.ca | Sarina B. Schrager |Dean A. Seehusen |Sumi M. Sexton |Caroline Richardson
There are multiple guidelines from publishers and organizations on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in publishing.1-5 However, none are specific to family medicine. Most journals have basic AI use recommendations for authors, but more explicit direction is needed, as not all AI tools are the same.
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Jan 9, 2025 |
aafp.org | Sarina B. Schrager |Dean A. Seehusen |Sumi M. Sexton |Jon O. Neher |Nicholas Pimlott |Marjorie Bowman | +5 more
The family medicine journal editors provide a unified statement about AI in academic publishing for authors, editors, publishers, and peer reviewers based on current understanding of the technology, which is rapidly advancing.
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Jan 7, 2025 |
annfammed.org | Sarina B. Schrager |Dean A. Seehusen |Sumi M. Sexton |Caroline Richardson
Research ArticleEditorial Use of AI in Family Medicine Publications: A Joint Editorial From Journal Editors Sarina Schrager, Dean A. Seehusen, Sumi Sexton, Caroline R. Richardson, Jon Neher, Nicholas Pimlott, Marjorie A. Bowman, José Rodríguez, Christopher P. Morley, Li Li and James Dom Dera
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Nov 15, 2024 |
jabfm.org | Dean A. Seehusen
Family MedicineScholarly PublishingThe specialty of family medicine is currently pushing for a future with more and better family medicine research. If successful, there will be much more family medicine literature to be published. Family medicine as a specialty has multiple high-quality journals covering research, clinical care, evidence-based medicine, health policy, and educational scholarship.
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Sep 23, 2024 |
annfammed.org | Bryce A. Ringwald |Michelle Taylor |Dean A. Seehusen |Jennifer Middleton
AbstractPURPOSE Meeting scholarly activity requirements continues to be a challenge in many family medicine (FM) residency programs. Studies comprehensively describing FM resident scholarship have been limited. We sought to identify institutional factors associated with increased scholarly output and meeting requirements of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME).
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Jan 5, 2024 |
jabfm.org | Marjorie Bowman |Dean A. Seehusen
COVID-19/Post-COVID-19COVID-19 has not yet left us. We had hoped, but COVID-19 lingers. Several articles illustrate the good, the bad, and the ugly for patients and practices. COVID-19 was expensive. Researchers count the cost, not just in dollars, but in lives and emotional well-being of patients and clinicians. Substantial costs and health issues continue far beyond an initial COVID-19 illness, as verified by the work of Khan et al.1 The costs are staggering.
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Aug 10, 2023 |
jabfm.org | Marjorie Bowman |Dean A. Seehusen
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Aug 9, 2023 |
jabfm.org | Dean A. Seehusen |Marjorie Bowman
The editorial team of JABFM is pleased to announce that Dr. Jacqueline Britz, MD, MSPH, has been selected as the inaugural ABFM Research and Editing Fellow. Dr. Britz completed her MSc in Public Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. She received her medical degree from Virginia Commonwealth University, where she is currently an Assistant Professor of Family Medicine and Population Health. She is the Co-Director of the Virginia Ambulatory Care Outcomes Network (ACORN).
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Apr 4, 2023 |
jabfm.org | Dean A. Seehusen |Marjorie Bowman
Providing Primary CareMedication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) for opioid use disorder (OUD) is within the scope of care of primary care clinicians. Indeed, to address the large number of Americans with OUD, primary care clinicians must be part of the solution. Providing training to help clinicians become more confident with MAT is a necessary first step. Gardner-Buckshaw et al. report on 1 such training program in Ohio.10 Separately, Onishi et al.