Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
The Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation is the official journal of the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine (ACRM). The journal is published monthly by Elsevier, and is the most highly cited journal in the Rehabilitation category of the Thomson Reuters Journal Citation Reports. The 2013 Impact Factor is 2.441.
The journal is edited by Leighton Chan and Allen W. Heinemann.
Award
The Licht Award
Sidney Licht, MD, was a longtime member of the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and was its president in 1967-68. He was the editor of the Physical Medicine Library, which was published by his wife, Elizabeth. The Licht award originated in March 1979 with its first award presented to Carl Granger, Gary Albrecht, and Byron Hamilton for their article "Outcomes of Comprehensive Medical Rehabilitation: Measurement by PULSES Profile and the Barthel Index".[1] The award is given every year for the best scientific article published in Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation during the previous year.
History
Content for this timeline was obtained from historical records, conference proceedings, and other documents of the ACRM. It is a summary of those events and markers that reflect the evolution of Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, and therefore is not a comprehensive history.
- 1920: The Journal of Radiology was launched.
- 1926: The journal changed its name from the Journal of Radiology to the Archives of Physical Therapy, X-ray, Radium, and was declared the official journal of the American Congress of Physical Therapy.
- 1930: Albert F. Tyler, MD, presented the Archives to the American Congress of Physical Therapy as a debt-free, unencumbered gift.
- 1938: The journal name was shortened to Archives of Physical Therapy given the decreased emphasis on X-ray and radium among physicians using physical modalities.
- 1939: The Society of Physical Therapy Physicians was formed, the forerunner of the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (AAPM&R). The Archives was designated its official journal.
- 1945: The name of the journal became the Archives of Physical Medicine. The term "physical medicine" represented a change of emphasis from the purely clinical to the scientific and diagnostic basis of the medical use of physical agents. It also served to clarify the distinction between physicians and technicians of physical therapy, a stance the American Medical Association had recently adopted.
- 1952: Increasing recognition of the relationship between physical medicine and the rapidly growing field of rehabilitation resulted in a name change from the American Congress of Physical Therapy, to the American Congress of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.
- 1953: The official name of the journal changed to its present name, Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.
- 1966: The official name of the Congress was changed once again, to the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine (ACRM).
- 1973: ACRM and AAPM&R executed an agreement whereby both organizations shared responsibility for the journal. This formalized a long period whereby AAPM&R designated Archives its official journal.
- 1986: AAPM&R and the ACRM entered into a formal shared ownership of the Archives.
- 2009: AAPM&R relinquishes co-ownership of the Archives. The ACRM is the sole owner again.
- 2013: The Archives undergoes a redesign, taking its new design from the redesigned ACRM logo. The overlapping petals of the lotus flower visually communicate the interdisciplinary nature of Archives and culture of ACRM. The seeds of the lotus, much like Archives and ACRM, remain viable for many, many years. The lotus is also a symbol of rebirth, rising from dark and muddy waters; the ACRM community and the research published in Archives aim to bring about new beginnings for people affected by disabling conditions.
Abstracting and Indexing
The contents of Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation are indexed in Index Medicus/MEDLINE, Excerpta Medica/EMBASE, Current Contents/Clinical Medicine, Science Citation Index, Citation alert, BIOSIS Previews, and CINAHL.
See also
References
- ↑ Granger, CV; Albrecht, GL; Hamilton, BB (1979). "Outcome of comprehensive medical rehabilitation: measurement by PULSES profile and the Barthel Index". Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 60 (4): 145–54.