Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society and the Journal of Infectious Diseases Collaboration: The First Fruits From a New Tree - Report - MDSpire
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Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society and the Journal of Infectious Diseases Collaboration: The First Fruits From a New Tree
Collaboration Between JPIDS and JID: Initial Outcomes of a New Partnership
Overview
The Journal of Pediatric Infectious Diseases (JPIDS) and the Journal of Infectious Diseases (JID) have initiated a collaborative series focusing on neurovirulence in infectious diseases. This partnership aims to bridge pediatric and adult infectious disease research, highlighting both shared and unique pathogenetic features across age groups.
Background
Infectious diseases span multiple disciplines and often require coordinated efforts among clinicians, researchers, and public health entities. Historically, JPIDS and JID have operated independently despite overlapping readerships. Recognizing the similarities and developmental differences in infectious diseases between children and adults, the new editors-in-chief have fostered collaboration to enhance the quality and relevance of published research. This collaboration is exemplified by a forthcoming series of review articles on central nervous system infections and neurovirulence.
Data Highlights
This editorial commentary does not present numerical data but outlines the scope and intent of the collaborative series on neurovirulence, covering pathogens such as Zika virus, cytomegalovirus, arboviruses, enterovirus, herpes simplex virus, group B streptococci, Streptococcus pneumoniae, malaria, Toxoplasma gondii, cryptococcus, and tuberculosis.
Key Findings
JPIDS and JID have launched a joint series of articles focusing on neurovirulence in infectious diseases.
The collaboration highlights both similarities and developmental differences in CNS infections between children and adults.
Guest editors have curated contributions from basic science and clinical experts to provide comprehensive reviews.
The series will cover a broad range of pathogens affecting the central nervous system.
The partnership aims to leverage the strengths of both journals to better serve their overlapping readership.
Future joint ventures will be guided by reader and colleague input on relevant infectious disease topics.
Clinical Implications
This collaboration facilitates a more integrated understanding of CNS infections across age groups, which can inform clinical decision-making and research priorities. Clinicians should anticipate access to comprehensive reviews that elucidate pathogen-specific neurovirulence mechanisms and age-related host responses. The partnership encourages multidisciplinary dialogue that may enhance patient care strategies in infectious diseases.
Conclusion
The JPIDS and JID collaboration represents a strategic effort to unify pediatric and adult infectious disease scholarship, beginning with a focused series on neurovirulence. This initiative promises to enrich the literature and foster ongoing interdisciplinary engagement.
References
Akhtar & McElroy 2024 -- Collaboration Between the Journal of Pediatric Infectious Diseases and the Journal of Infectious Diseases: Initial Outcomes from a New Partnership