开放获取期刊获得更多读者和引用
700 种期刊 和 15,000,000 名读者 每份期刊 获得 25,000 多名读者
Jason Cheng*
About one year ago,a group of leaders from major national pathology organizations and other stakeholders gathered at the Banbury Conference Center, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York, to discuss “genome-era pathology and personalized medicine”. At the conference, a national “Call to Action” was proposed to change the nature of the practice of pathology as well as the education of medical students and pathology residents. Pathologists were also urged to take the leadership of personalized medicine in the genome era. This call suggests that pathology communities have been lagging behind and slow to advance in biomedical science. If this is indeed the case, how can we explain that pathologists have traditionally been at the forefront of medicine ever since our founding father Rudolf Virchow established microscopic morphology-based pathology 150 years ago? Based on clinical and morphologic findings, pathologists have made diagnoses and directed therapies for patients with various diseases. The pathology community has met its challenges, so why do we need to change now?