How I Wrote This: “Deciding on My Dimples” for the New England Journal of Medicine

In case you haven’t heard the news, a Perspective I wrote about shared decision making during awake craniotomy (brain surgery) was published a few weeks ago in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM). I am over the moon excited.

NEJM is recognized as one of the most influential medical journals in the world with an academic impact factor of 91.24 (nerdy academics know what this mean). Getting published in NEJM at least once is consider to be a major career accomplishment.

Check it out!

Acknowledgements

From concept to publication, it took eight months for this Perspective to be published in the journal. One thing missing is an acknowledgements section. If the journal allowed it, I had planned to thank the following individuals.

Liz Salmi

Liz Salmi is Communications & Patient Initiatives Director for OpenNotes at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Over the last 15 years Liz has been: a research subject; an advisor in patient stakeholder groups; a leader in “patient engagement” research initiatives; and an innovator, educator and investigator in national educational and research projects. Today her work focuses on involving patients and care partners in the co-design of research and research dissemination. It is rumored Liz was the drummer in a punk rock band.

https://thelizarmy.com
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Stronger Than Ever: Liz Salmi in Sacramento Magazine

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I am the population now: The tale of a brain cancer “n of 1”