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Partnering With Oxford University Press

Alan M. Jette
DOI: 10.2522/ptj.2016.96.10.1490 Published 1 October 2016
Alan M. Jette
Catherine Worthingham Fellow of the American Physical Therapy AssociationEditor in Chief, PTJ
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This past spring, APTA's Board of Directors decided that APTA will enter into a partnership with Oxford University Press (OUP) to co-publish PTJ, starting in January 2017. As editor in chief of PTJ, I am very excited about the Board's decision to partner with OUP.

I believe that Oxford University Press will be a great fit for PTJ. As the world's largest university press with the widest global presence, OUP publishes more than 6,000 titles a year worldwide, including journals, dictionaries, English-language teaching materials, scholarly monographs, printed music, higher education textbooks, children's books, and schoolbooks. Oxford University Press has more than 350 journal titles that receive an impact factor, with about 22% of its journals ranked in the top 10% of at least 1 subject category, reflecting OUP's position as a trusted gateway to high-quality scholarly research and resources.

Oxford University Press will offer PTJ a publishing platform powered by Silverchair Information Systems. The new website will allow both seamless delivery of journal content and integration with other online resources for PTJ readers. Our aim is state-of-the-art dissemination and display of scholarly work, and the new website will be a key component in the next phase of PTJ's development.

Partnering with OUP also will expand …

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Vol 96 Issue 10 Table of Contents
Physical Therapy: 96 (10)

Issue highlights

  • Our Future Selves: Unprecedented Opportunities
  • Toward a Transformed Understanding: From Pain and Movement to Pain With Movement
  • Virtual Reality for Stroke Rehabilitation
  • Consensus on Exercise Reporting Template (CERT): Modified Delphi Study
  • Agreement of Mechanical Diagnosis and Therapy Classification in People With Extremity Conditions
  • High-Intensity Interval Training and Moderate-Intensity Continuous Training in Ambulatory Chronic Stroke: Feasibility Study
  • Therapeutic Ultrasound and Treadmill Training Suppress Peripheral Nerve Injury–Induced Pain in Rats
  • A Further Step to Develop Patient-Friendly Implementation Strategies for Virtual Reality–Based Rehabilitation in Patients With Acute Stroke
  • Transitions in the Embodied Experience After Stroke: Grounded Theory Study
  • Neck Posture Clusters and Their Association With Biopsychosocial Factors and Neck Pain in Australian Adolescents
  • Physical Therapists' Role in Health Promotion as Perceived by the Patient: Descriptive Survey
  • Finding the “Right-Size” Physical Therapy Workforce: International Perspective Across 4 Countries
  • Does the Brief-BESTest Meet Classical Test Theory and Rasch Analysis Requirements for Balance Assessment in People With Neurological Disorders?
  • Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire and Oswestry Disability Index: Which Has Better Measurement Properties for Measuring Physical Functioning in Nonspecific Low Back Pain? Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
  • Responsiveness of the Balance Evaluation Systems Test (BESTest) in People With Subacute Stroke
  • Use of Rasch Analysis to Evaluate and Refine the Community Balance and Mobility Scale for Use in Ambulatory Community-Dwelling Adults Following Stroke
  • de Morton Mobility Index Is Feasible, Reliable, and Valid in Patients With Critical Illness
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Partnering With Oxford University Press
Alan M. Jette
Physical Therapy Oct 2016, 96 (10) 1490-1491; DOI: 10.2522/ptj.2016.96.10.1490

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Partnering With Oxford University Press
Alan M. Jette
Physical Therapy Oct 2016, 96 (10) 1490-1491; DOI: 10.2522/ptj.2016.96.10.1490
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More in this TOC Section

  • The Revolving Hospital Door
  • Meeting the Challenge of the High-Need, High-Cost Population
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Subjects

  • American Physical Therapy Association
    • APTA: Other
  • Editorials
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    • Alan Jette

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