The study of human fertility has expanded dramatically since the birth of IVF and with it, the body of literature.
That said, the availability of open access publication in the field remains somewhat limited. Fertility Research and
Practice offers a new open access, peer-reviewed venue for quality clinical, basic science and translational studies
and scholarly reviews in human fertility, infertility and early pregnancy. The journal specifically encourages works
from international contributors and from investigators in less-resourced environments and has gathered an editorial
board with a breadth of geographic representation to support this mission.
Together with Biomed Central, Drs. Elizabeth S. Ginsburg
and Danny J. Schust are pleased to announce the launch
of a new peer reviewed open-access online journal entitled
Fertility Research and Practice . We hope that readers
enjoy this new, relevant addition to the medical literature
and welcome submissions.
In an era notable for rapid expansion in the choices
an investigator, clinician and author has available for
publication of a particular manuscript, it is important
to distinguish a new entry by it s unique characteristics,
and Fertility Research and Practice has many. We
understand that the experiences and interests of basic
science and clinical researchers, medical and paramedical
practitioners and thought leaders from all regions of the
world have the potential to instruct and impact healthcare
locally and more broadly. We therefore encourage a wide
diversity of submissions.
The scope of Fertility Research and Practice includes
male and female fertility and early pregnancy. While our
focus is on human work, we appreciate that much of
what we know about humans was first learned through
the study of animal models and/or through in vitro
modeling, so we also welcome experimental work with
translational applications. We welcome basic science,
translational, clinical and epidemiological studies that
may be presented as traditional data-based manuscripts,
brief reports, reviews and commentaries, case reports
and case series. Fertility Research and Practice also has
the capability to accept video submissions. Our interests
in fertility and early pregnancy are also broad, diverse
and inclusive. Among our many areas of interest are the
diagnosis and correction of endometriosis and congenital
and acquired anomalies of the male and female reproduct-
ive tracts. We have additional interests in reproductive
infectious diseases, male and female fertility diagnostics
(including imaging) and assisted reproductive techniques,
including embryology. Unlike some fertility journals,
our scope has a specific emphasis on early pregnancy,
including implantation, and diagnosis and treatment of
pregnancies of unknown location and sporadic and recur-
rent early pregnancy loss. We have a particular interest in
the effects of environmental exposures on fertility and
early pregnancy and on epidemiology and welcome novel
and cutting-edge diagnostic and therapeutic approaches.
Drs. Ginsburg and Schust have been fortunate to have
assembled a very skilled and respected group of inter-
national scholars on their editorial board whose expertise
covers the breadth and depth of Fertility Research and
Practice’s scope of interest.
First and foremost, we are an open access journal
whose mission includes wide distribution without geo-
graphic or cost barriers. As an open access journal, au-
thors are requested to contribute to publication costs,
an unavoidable mandate of the open access business
model that is rapidly expanding into non-open access
* Correspondence:
[email protected];
[email protected]
1Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health, University of
Missouri School of Medicine, 500 North Keene Street, Suite 203, Columbia
MO 65201, USA
2Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Brigham and Women's, Hospital,
Harvard Medical School, 75 Francis Street, ASB1 3rd floor, Boston, MA 02115,
USA
© 2015 Schust and Ginsburg; licensee BioMed Central. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use,
distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public
Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this
article, unless otherwise stated.
Schust and Ginsburg Fertility Research and Practice 2015, 1:1
http://www.fertilityresearchandpractice.com/content/1/1/1
journals as well. To satisfy this financial business
mandate while encouraging the greatest possible geo-
graphic and economic diversity among submitted and
published manuscripts, however, BioMed Central has a
policy of reducing or waiving publication fees for submis-
sions from less developed/less resourced authors and in-
stitutions. This integral part of their business plan makes
publication in a BioMed Central Journal such as Fertility
Research and Practice an option for all authors and from
institutions of all sizes.
BioMed Central has an illustrious history in the open-
access publication field and is committed to rapid and
supportive review (usually in less than 14 business days;
if not an explanation of the delay is forwarded), wide-
spread distribution not limited by mail access or library
subscription, and access to readers without cost. Open
access publication benefits authors by increasing access
and readership when compared to subscription-based
publication [1], which enables the potential for increased
citations [2,3]. Open access articles also fulfil the mandates
of most funding agencies for distribution of research find-
ings. Attributes of the open access model should not be
tempered by a reduction in the quality of the published
manuscripts; this is assured within Fertility Research and
Practice by the demanding standards of BioMed Central
[4], the expertise, training and experience of the journal ’s
editorial board and editors-in-chief and the journals
inclusion in the CROWN Initiative. The Core Out-
comes in Women ’s Health (CROWN) initiative is led
by an international group of journal editors who are
making a concerted effort to reduce the heretofore
widespread inconsistencies in the reporting of outcomes
in women’s health research. Such inconsistencies make
studies of a particular intervention or its outcomes
difficult to compare and therefore hinders our ability to
make recommendations based on the literature. We at
Fertility Research and Practice are committed to redu-
cing such inconsistencies in our own published articles
and will help the initiative in creating recommendations
when they apply to our scope.
In the inaugural edition of Fertility Research and Prac-
tice, we present four articles that exemplify the breadth
of our scope of interest. Two of the inaugural articles
address surgical issues within reproductive medicine.
Brady and Styer [5] provide a case report and literature
review surrounding a vexing patient with recurrent
idiopathic ovarian torsion while Bailey, et al. [6] report
on an animal model that uses omental flaps to aid in
adhesion prevention after abdominal surgery. The third
manuscript in the inaugural issue is epidemiology-based
and illustrates the journal ’s international interests. In this
manuscript, Rabbi and Kabir [7] assess changes in birth
intervals and mean age of childbearing in Bangladesh.
Our final inaugural manuscript [8] reports on a clinical
study of time to pregnancy in patients with recurrent
pregnancy loss stratified by spontaneous versus assisted
conception.
Please enjoy the launch edition of Fertility Research
and Practice . We welcome your submissions.
Received: 27 February 2015 Accepted: 27 February 2015
Published: 21 April 2015