International Journal of Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork: A First-Year Retrospective View Reflecting Google Analytics and Open Journal Systems Sources


 

KEYWORDS: Massage research, massage education, massage practice, open access publishing, OJS, Google Analytics, journal webstats, journal statistics, CIM research, fascia research, bodywork research

The date August 20, 2009, represents exactly one year since the launch of the inaugural issue of International Journal of Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork (IJTMB). During that first year, four issues of the journal were published—in August and December 2008, and in March and June 2009. This editorial focuses on identifying information sources that interested readers may consult regarding various available data for profiling the journal’s accessibility and progress thus far.

Perhaps the principal data source is that of the IJTMB’s Google Analytics webstats site, which is available to interested parties through a generic visitors’ account. This source is accessible through either the hyperlink just cited or at www.google.com/analytics/ . In either case, once the “Access Analytics” option is activated, the complete database can be examined by entering info@massagetherapyfoundation.org (username) and ijtmbstats (password). Various sectors of this database provide such information as the extent of site usage, a visitor overview, a traffic sources overview, a map overlay with a rank ordering of visitors’ countries, a content overview, new and returning visitors, visitor loyalty, and keywords used in accessing the journal. Particularly useful in understanding certain terminology specific to the Google Analytics reporting format is the Glossary , available through a standard Help option while navigating the site.

Table 1 provides selected excerpts from certain sectors of the IJTMB’s Google Analytics webstats. Although the table lists only the top 10 countries in terms of rank order by number of visitors, it is of particular note that as many as 120 countries are represented by colleagues who have visited the IJTMB’s site. This statistic alone gives testimony to one of the major objectives of immediate, open-access scholarly publishing: the expansive availability of a professional resource that might otherwise be quite limited because of any combination of financial, political, geographic, and logistical constraints.

 

TABLE 1. Google Analytics Webstats for the International Journal of Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork, August 20, 2008 –August 20, 2009.

 

Another data source providing valuable information regarding the progress of the IJTMB is the Stats & Reports sector of the journal’s website. This feature is a component of the Open Journal Systems (OJS) software used by the IJTMB and mentioned in an earlier editorial(1) as part of Canada’s Public Knowledge Project. Although readily accessible to readers through the “About the Journal” option at the top of the home page, the journal’s Editorial Board will periodically highlight for our readership pertinent information from this database. Relevant data provided on a calendar year basis include the number of issues published; total number of manuscript submissions; submissions peer-reviewed, accepted, declined, and resubmitted; days to review; days to publication; and number of registered users and readers. Table 2 shows pertinent data spanning the IJTMB’s four issues published since its inception in August 2008.

 

TABLE 2. Open Journal System (OJS)–Based Statistics for the International Journal of Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork, August 20, 2008 –August 20, 2009

 

In addition to the Stats & Reports journal management sector just cited, another information source available for periodic dissemination to the journal’s readership is the number of “views” per entry in each issue of the IJTMB. These data span not only articles per se appearing in the journal, but editorials and entries in both the Commentaries and the News/Announcements sections of the journal. In the context of the four journal issues published thus far, these are the top three entries eliciting the most views as of August 20, 2009:

 

The top three journal entries cited earlier as eliciting the most views by readers (9825 in toto) appeared in the Practice section of the journal. Readers have been attracted seemingly to a lesser extent to entries in the Research and Education sections. Although a competitive theme is certainly not the intent here, the effectiveness of the journal would seem to be enhanced if greater balance were in place across all three major sections with respect to both the number of manuscript submissions received and, by implication, the potential for number of articles actually published per section. Prospective contributing authors are encouraged to contact any member of the Editorial Board for assistance in manuscript preparation and submission. Furthermore, this type of assistance is also available through the journal’s publishing firm— Multimed —and can be coordinated in tandem with any Editorial Board member.

This calendar year of 2009 provides the IJTMB with its first opportunity for the complete range of quarterly issues. By the start of 2010, six issues will have been published and a context established for the journal to serve as one of two publishing venues for two major international conferences. As referenced in the News/ Announcements section of this issue, the IJTMB will be a publishing venue for selected papers scheduled for presentation at the Second International Fascia Research Congress in Amsterdam in October 2009. Likewise, the journal will function as a publishing outlet for selected presentations at the Second Highlight ing Massage Therapy in CIM Research Conference to be held in Seattle in May 2010. The IJTMB’s track record established thus far in its first year of existence—in combination with the publishing expectations of the two previously-cited conferences—should allow for an even further expansion in the near future of the journal’s impact among colleagues involved in the research, educational, and practice aspects of the mas-sage/bodywork profession.

Glenn M. Hymel, EdD, LMT
Executive Editor, IJTMB
Professor and Former Chair
Department of Psychology
Loyola University
New Orleans, LA, USA

 

CONFLICT OF INTEREST NOTIFICATION

The author declares that there are no conflicts of interest.

 

COPYRIGHT

Published under the CreativeCommons Attribution NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License .

REFERENCES

  1. Hymel GM. From the executive editor’s perspective ... Int J Ther Massage Bodyw 2008;1(1):1–2. http://www.ijtmb.org/ index.php/ijtmb/article/view/6/25 . Published August 20, 2008. Accessed August 21, 2009.
  2. Zalta J. Orthopedic massage protocol for post-anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction patellofemoral pain syndrome: a case report. Int J Ther Massage Bodyw 2008;1(2):11–21. http:// www.ijtmb.org/index.php/ijtmb/article/view/22/35. Published December 15, 2008. Accessed August 21, 2009.

  3. Grant KE, Balletto J, Gowan-Moody D, Healey D, Kincaid D, Lowe W, et al. Steps toward massage therapy guidelines: a first report to the profession. Int J Ther Massage Bodyw 2008;1(1):19–36. http://www.ijtmb.org/index.php/ijtmb/article/view/5/23. Published August 20, 2008. Accessed August 21, 2009.
  4. LeMoon K. Clinical reasoning in massage therapy. Int J Ther Massage Bodyw 2008;1(1): 12–18. http://www.ijtmb.org/ index.php/ijtmb/article/view/2/20 . Published August 20, 2008. Accessed August 21, 2009.


INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE AND BODYWORK—VOLUME 2, NUMBER 3, SEPTEMBER 2009