A Twitter Journal Club
January 13, 2017
I want to alert you to a very interesting innovation which was instituted at the end of 2016 and will continue into this new year: the Canadian Academy of Sport and Exercise Medicine (CASEM) Twitter-based journal club.
You read that right — a journal club, on Twitter.
We’re all familiar with journal clubs. In fact, the fellowship in which I teach (Nationwide Children’s Hospital Sports Medicine) just completed its monthly journal club yesterday, with the fellow (sports medicine physician in training, Jonathan Napolitano) leading the group of doctors through a study published in our January 2017 CJSM: Reliability Testing of the Balance Error Scoring System in Children Between the Ages of 5 and 14.
I recently wrote of the vital, and increasing, importance social media plays in the dissemination of sports medicine research. A Twitter journal club is an example of that phenomenon.
The CASEM Journal Club just got off the ground at the end of 2016, and had as its first selection another CJSM study: Physical Exam Risk Factors for Lower Extremity Injuries in High School Athletes: A Systematic Review. Seems like both CASEM and I found this to be particularly intriguing. To wit, I cajoled the lead author of that study, Jimmy Onate, into recording a podcast with me. And then he pulled duty on the CASEM Journal Club as the guest author, interacting on Twitter with folks from around the globe. What a great opportunity — to get to ask the author directly the questions one has after reading his/her study.
The study for this month’s CASEM journal club is the same one we deconstructed in our fellowship yesterday: the reliability of the BESS in a pediatric population It hits close to my heart. Read more of this post