Global Health Action: surviving infancy and taking first steps

In this fifth anniversary editorial for Global Health Action (GHA), we share with our readers and authors our reflections on the positive development of our journal during its first five years. At the same time, we wish to acknowledge the high-quality work of our many reviewers and the commitment of our editorial board members and mentors. (Published: 20 September 2013) Citation: Global Health Action 2013, 6 : 22815 - http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/gha.v6i0.22815

Locating GHA to address the digital divide in global health research GHA was launched at the end of May 2008 as a collaborative effort between Umeå Centre for Global Health Research at Umeå University and Co-Action Publishing. The journal was established to 'contribute to fuelling a more concrete, hands-on approach to global health challenge', and to address the global health agenda, with a strong focus on policy and implementation (1). GHA welcomes papers on strengthening health information, understanding health determinants in cross-cultural settings, documenting effective health interventions in local settings, and contributing to a better understanding of the performance of health systems in different settings. GHA calls for a strong emphasis on action, previously not addressed strongly by journals in the field of global health (1,2).
During The articles published in GHA represent broad areas of global health research ranging from mortality, climate change, demography and health systems operation and financing to disease and risk factor surveillance, with the vast majority of research being conducted in Africa, Asia, and in rural settings, where high-quality research evidence has been generally lacking. Figure 2 shows a 'word cloud' based on the titles of all articles published in GHA during the first five years.
Addressing key niches and taking innovative action During the first five years, we focused on three niches which differentiate us from the other journals in the same field: mentorship to young researchers from low-and middle-income countries (LMICs); PhD review papers which help young researchers to kick start and sustain their research careers; and study design and capacity building articles to document details of research design and capacity building activities in LMICs.

Mentorship
High-quality research evidence from LMICs is often lacking and inaccessible to the global scientific community. While epidemiological citations in PubMed from many African and Asian countries occur at a rate of less than 0.05 per 1,000 populations, the rate is over 1 per 1,000 in Scandinavia and elsewhere, that is, 20-fold greater (3). The immediate consequence of this is that health policy and planning in many countries, as well as at a global level, continues to struggle with a severely inadequate evidence base, and in some cases, scarce health resources are not used effectively because of this lack of evidence. This phenomenon is due not so much to a lack of quality of the research generated, but because of a lack of capacity to report the results according to the rigorous standards required for international scientific publication. A substantial amount of effort is required to raise a poorly presented, but promising, paper to international standards. This goes way beyond the support that can reasonably be given by reviewers and editors, which is why such papers usually end up being rejected. GHA is highly committed to building research capacity globally by offering academic mentorship to less-experienced researchers in order to help in the development of highquality manuscripts. GHA has been successful in providing the additional level of support needed by researchers in their early careers. A group of multidisciplinary and experienced researchers in global health have committed themselves to serve as such mentors for GHA, who are recognized in the published articles as 'Contributing Editors', should the paper be accepted after the peer review process. One example of such mentorship can be shown in the supplement 'Public health in Vietnam: here's the data, where's the action?' where three guest editors acted as mentors and built capacity among local researchers in Vietnam to write and publish high-quality scientific papers. This mentorship was built on top of the regular peer review process followed by GHA.

PhD review papers
PhD review papers are a special niche that was initiated by GHA in 2009. Young researchers who have recently defended their PhD within the field of global health are invited to submit a paper based on their PhD. One rationale for this is that PhD theses are often based on a set of published articles synthesized into a 'cover story' of some 30Á50 pages. Some of these syntheses provide excellent reviews of the research area but they seldom reach beyond the host institution or the close collaborators and examiners of the student. Condensing this content into a PhD review paper may serve as an incentive for a young researcher to publish his or her first postdoc paper as a sole author. Should the paper be accepted after peer review, the opponent or examiner is invited to write a commentary, for publication alongside the PhD review.
An example of a PhD review paper is that of Mark Collinsson, based on his PhD thesis ''Striving against adversity: the dynamics of migration, health and poverty in rural South Africa'' published in 2010 (4) along with a commentary by the opponent Professor Kim Streatfield (5). GHA readers can also download a PowerPoint file from the field site Agincourt in South Africa, as well as a video showing the public defence on 15 May 2009, from the GHA website.

Capacity building and study design papers
Capacity building articles are published to document how intervention strategies in dealing with major public health issues have been developed, sometimes translated, to fit different contextual settings in LMICs. These papers reflect how partnerships and collaboration are established and built over time, and how research capacities are being built and sustained in LMICs. One example is a recently published capacity building article that dissects North-South partnerships for health in Tanzania (6). This article discusses the process and impact of scaling up on Southern partners' organizational functioning on HIV and AIDS issues in the Kilimanjaro Region in Tanzania.
Study design articles are published as a response to the need for long-term epidemiological studies and multicentre studies to be able to set the scene for international collaborations in a methodological paper presenting the design, rationale and aims as well as hypotheses and background data to be referenced in forthcoming more detailed papers.
One example is a recently published design article from the 'DengueTools' research project, which is funded under the health theme of the 7th Framework Programme of the European Community. This article reports on the rationale and specific study objectives of the project, which is a consortium of 14 partners from several countries in Europe, Asia, and South America (7). Another study design article outlines the role that members of the Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems (HDSSs) of the INDEPTH Network could play in monitoring progress towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) (8). The unique qualities of the data generated by HDSSs lie in the fact that they provide an opportunity to measure or evaluate interventions longitudinally, through a long-term follow-up of defined populations.

Gaining trust from authors
Submission and rejection rate Submission to GHA has quadrupled from 51 manuscripts in the first 12 months to 190 manuscripts per annum (including articles in special issues and invited commentaries) in the fifth year. GHA pledges to ensure the highest possible quality of published manuscripts, and the 5-year rejection rate in GHA is 48% (ranging from 25% in the first year to 54% in the fifth year) as shown in Figure 3. The editorial team rejects poor quality manuscripts directly in-house. Two to three external reviewers, whose excellent work ensures high-quality manuscripts published in GHA, review each manuscript.
The percentage at the top of Figure 3 represents the proportion of manuscripts rejected in respective years. Only manuscripts for which a publication decision has been made are included in the analysis. At the time of writing this article, 34 manuscripts are under review as of 30th June 2013, and these are not included in the statistics for submitted manuscripts for Year 5.

Time from submission to first decision
We aim to provide a quick decision to authors who submit their papers to GHA. Manuscripts that do not qualify for publication in GHA will be rejected within a few working days. We aim to provide first review-based decisions to authors within seven weeks following submission. The average time from submission to first decision decreased from about 55 days in the first year to 39 days in the fifth year.

Highlights from editorials and special issues
Several key editorials have been written by global health experts in the field of non-communicable diseases and climate change as well as experts from many key organizations such as WHO, the INDEPTH Network, and National Institutes of Health (Table 1). Since its inauguration through June 2013, GHA has published a total of 16 special issues or supplements, covering a wide range of research areas including climate change and disasters, non-communicable diseases, ageing, and mortality. Many of these represent cross-country research collaborations among researchers in LMICs, and many within the INDEPTH Network (www.indepthnetwork.org), which is a network of HDSS sites in Africa and Asia. Table 2 presents the topics and guest editors for selected special issues published during this period.

GHA Á opportunities and way forward
GHA has become one of the leading journals in the public health field using the Open Access model. Since  In the call for papers written by the editors, Zoë Mullan and Richard Horton, they stressed the importance of ''the work of researchers in low-income and middleincome countries who address urgent domestic concerns that don't always make it onto the front pages of general medical journals'' (34). GHA has addressed this gap since its conception. The rapid transition towards open access publishing is, on the one hand, an immense benefit to LMIC researchers, because they have free access to open access literature without needing to find resources for prohibitively expensive subscriptions. On the other hand, open access publishing cannot be totally free at all points in the process, and so support for paying publication fees is an important component for LMIC authors who rarely have either project or institutional funding for their work. Publication of an article in GHA incurs a relatively modest cost. However, to emphasize our commitment to extend an arena for publication in which developing settings can publish their research results, the publication fee may be waived for authors from institutions or projects unable to pay. GHA has received financial support from the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research during 2013Á2015 to expand the number of waivers to highly qualified researchers from LMICs who do not have the resources for publication fees.
All articles published in GHA are freely accessible online immediately after they have been accepted for publication and can thereafter be linked, read, downloaded, stored, printed and used by anybody with a computer and access to the internet. The Open Access model offers additional multimedia benefits with links to videos, audios, full datasets and appendices, unlimited colour budgets, and interactive features, none of which the printed medium can provide.
Co-Action Publishing ensures that the best web technology supports the editorial team at Umeå University as well as the contributing authors and reviewers and thereby enhances the scholarly content of GHA. Open access serves the interests of all: readers, authors, teachers, students, libraries, universities, funding agencies, and ultimately governments and citizens. It increases the visibility of individual authors' work; key resources are equally accessible to rich and poor; the mission of most universities to disseminate and share knowledge is facilitated, and funders (including governments) are given return on investment. Publishing open access directly contributes to the democratization of knowledge and helps reduce the digital divide between rich and poor nations.
We envision GHA as a leading journal in the global health area, with a mission to contribute to capacity building in global health research, especially in LMICs. We look forward to continue working with our reviewers and editorial board in the years to come to achieve the missions that GHA has delineated. We believe this collaboration will ensure that GHA will move from having taken first steps to taking major leaps in the near future.

Acknowledgement
The journal Global Health Action is partially supported by the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research. The editors acknowledge Anis Fuad, Gadjah Mada University, for help with some of the bibliometric analysis.

Managing Editor
Peter Byass Deputy Editor