key: cord-0691756-wemrxib4 authors: Perkins, Gavin D.; Bray, Janet; Couper, Keith; Morley, Peter; Scquizzato, Tommaso; Nolan, Jerry P. title: Resuscitation plus – Initial successes and future direction date: 2022-02-17 journal: Resusc Plus DOI: 10.1016/j.resplu.2022.100213 sha: 9cbe25e713f694948303e909e428af03372f5318 doc_id: 691756 cord_uid: wemrxib4 nan The journal is pleased to have established a collaboration with the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR). 11 ILCOR leads international efforts to continuously evaluate resuscitation research, seeking to develop consensus on science and treatment recommendations. 12 Resuscitation Plus looks to support the evidence evaluation process by providing a repository to publish ILCOR systematic and scoping reviews. High quality reviews published to date have covered topics of willingness to perform bystander CPR, 13 non-invasive monitoring during paediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation, 14 anticipatory manual defibrillator charging, 15 CPR and defibrillation in the prone position, 16 and briefing and debriefing in neonatal resuscitation. 17 The European Resuscitation Council, 18 the official sponsor of Resuscitation journal, have entered into a collaboration with Resuscitation Plus. The collaboration will have a particular focus on supporting the development of new researchers through the Young ERC group. 19 Planned activities include appointing a Young ERC Editor and Editorial Board members. This will provide a developmental opportunity for a young researcher to learn about editorial processes, supported by the journal editorial team. With the Young ERC, we plan to develop a mentorship programme which will pair mentees with mentors to work together over a defined period with opportunities to publish in the journal. Social media is an important tool to further the reach and impact of scientific research. The journal has launched a Twitter profile to assist with dissemination. The PlumX tool indicates that articles published in the journal have been shared on Facebook or Twitter close to 4000 times. The recent appointment of Tommaso Scquizzato as social media editor will drive forward our communication via social media platforms. Follow the journal on Twitter at @Resus_Plus, retweet to your colleagues and peers, share your articles published in the journal, and join the conversation online with other experts in the fields of cardiac arrest and CPR. Whilst it can take several years for a journal to receive an impact factor, we are optimistic the journal will receive one in the near future. Bibliometric scores of course provide just one lens for assessing a d i a b e t e s r e s e a r c h a n d c l i n i c a l p r a c t i c e 9 ( 2 0 2 2 ) 1 0 0 2 1 3 Available online at www.sciencedirect.com Resuscitation Plus journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/resuscitation-plus journal's success. We prefer to judge the success of Resuscitation Plus through the quality of articles published and their impact on resuscitation practice and patient outcomes. With the journal's desire to support the next generation of resuscitation scientists, we particularly welcome submissions from those early in their research careers. We hope the mentorship programme, being developed with the European Resuscitation Council will help accelerate that aspiration. The journal wishes to extend its international research and we particularly welcome articles from low and middle income countries who may benefit from the Research4Life subsidy programme (www.research4life.org). The journal's reviewers are critical to the journal's success and we celebrate and acknowledge their contributions. As a small gesture of thanks, the journal is pleased to waive article processing fees for the journal's most active reviewers. As Resuscitation Plus continues on the journey to becoming the number one choice for researchers who wish to share methodologically sound, open access articles related to resuscitation, we look forward to the number and type of submissions continuing to grow. The editors receive support from Elsevier. All authors have volunteer roles with the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation and their regional / national resuscitation councils. Anticipatory manual defibrillator charging during advanced life support: A scoping review Cardiopulmonary resuscitation and defibrillation for cardiac arrest when patients are in the prone position: A systematic review Use of briefing and debriefing in neonatal resuscitation, a scoping review The European resuscitation council: its history and development Introducing the 'Young ERC' -Starting a chain reaction for international collaboration in the social age The Author(s)