key: cord-0015133-5h670ozg authors: Bento, Ricardo Ferreira title: The International Archives of Otorhinolaryngology will turn 25 years in 2021! date: 2021-02-01 journal: Int Arch Otorhinolaryngol DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1722895 sha: 2ca330e845cb364d74455d8ddf63a8f46a050fd2 doc_id: 15133 cord_uid: 5h670ozg nan In 2021, the International Archives of Otorhinolaryngology (IAO) will complete 25 years of uninterrupted publication of clinical, basic research and systematic review articles, contributing effectively to the progress of scientific knowledge in Otorhinolaryngology, Audiology, Speech Therapy and related sciences. The scientific journal is a publication sponsored by the Otorhinolaryngologic Foundation and edited by Thieme Medical Publishers. This year's is the 25th volume published since 1997, 1,2 and it is composed of original articles and literature reviews carefully selected by a large international editorial board and peer-revied by renowned researchers who voluntarily contributed to add greater quality to the content of the articles evaluated. With the COVID-19 pandemic crisis, the year 2020 represented a challenge to maintain the journal regarding the serious social and economic problems faced worldwide, but the editorial team did not lack the will and determination to keep the journal going. The IAO was the first electronic journal in the world, so much so that its first name was International @rchives of Otorhinolaryngology, with the "@" referring to the concept of open access, and it used the newly-created internet for the universal and free dissemination of its files. [2] [3] [4] Although the internet already existed for communication between academic centers since 1983, it started to be used by the general population around 1993-1994, initially with dial-in networks and few resources. 5 In this context, Ricardo Bento, professor of Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) at The School of Medicine of University of Sao Paulo (Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo, FMUSP, in Portuguese) and Claudio Lazzarini, otorhinolaryngologist at the Otorhinolaryngology Service of FMUSP, who were enthusiastic about this new technology, which was even contested by many who did not believe in its future, decided to create a scientific journal with printed and electronic versions, with a website and open-access articles. It was the first in the world. 2,4 The journal was the first medical journal to publish pictures in anaglyph 3D coming with the special glasses in 2000 (issue 4, volume 2). The journal official scientific publication of the Otorhinolaryngology Foundation, which has sponsored it throughout these years, within its statutory objectives of encouraging research and the dissemination of the specialty. A large number of people who believed in the initiative have worked long and heard since the initial days, when few articles were received, until today, when hundreds of papers are submitted annually to the journal. Ricardo Ferreira Bento (1997) (1998) . Tanit Ganz Sanchez (1999 Sanchez ( -2005 . 2019-continuous publication: to accelerate the publication of articles, the IAO journal adopted the continuous publication model, which enables the quick publication of articles. After approval and the writing of the editorial, the articles are automatically published online and indexed in the databases without the need to wait for the quarterly publication of the printed journal. 17 2020-video data innovation: new section of the journal in which high-level reviews will be published with videos of diagnoses and/or treatments. It is a great innovation, aligning scientific publication and technology. 18 In the year of the COVID-19 pandemic, the journal was one of the first that published in its second edition of 2020 studies related to COVID-19, confirming its pioneering spirit since its foundation in 1997. 19, 20 The editorial management adopted seeks excellence in editorial quality, integrity in the dissemination of knowledge, as well as the sustainability of the journal, and the internationalization and expansion of its visibility. Some of the strategies adopted are: the use of an electronic administrative system to process articles, the use of a similarity detection tool and guides to improve texts, in addition to the adoption of the rolling publication system. This historic date must be celebrated, and I want to thank everyone who at some point contributed to the existence and continuity of the journal, as well as the authors who trusted it over the years. To our editorial board and section editors, for the technical work of analyzing the submitted works and the peer review team. They are the scientific basis of this journal. We cannot forget the entire team at the Otorhinolaryngology Foundation, especially our Director, Adriana Fozzati, and our President, Professor Richard Voegels, for their support and work. Special thanks to the current editorial team: Professor Geraldo Jotz, "the tireless," our Chief Editor, and Aline Bittencourt, our extremely active Co-Editor. To our Librarian, Adilson Montefusco, for his thoroughness and efficiency, and to Thieme Medical Publishers for having believed in our work. Let's move on! Let's learn from the past and look to the future! And IAO's future is guaranteed! The International Archives of Otorhinolaryngology Bento 2 FUNPEC-RP: Fundação de Pesquisas Científicas de Ribeirão Preto A Indexação da Arquivos Internacionais de Otorrinolaringologia a SciELO The internet's early days: the story of the internet's first moments in Brazil International archives of otorhinolaryngology and thieme medical publishers DOAJ -Directory of Open Access Journals International Archives of Otorhinolaryngology National Library of Medicine. International Archives of Otorhinolaryngology: PubMed Central International Archives of Otorhinolaryngology is now Indexed in Emerging Sources Citation Index of Web of Science International Archives of Otorhinolaryngology Continuous Publication: Speeding up the Publication of Articles The World Has Changed Otorhinolaryngologists and Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) High Risk of COVID-19 Infection for Head and Neck Surgeons The Author(s)