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Letters |

Space Medicine in Peer-Reviewed Journals

Russell B. Rayman, MD
[+] Author Affiliations

Margaret A. Winker, MDSenior Editor: IndividualAuthor
Phil B. Fontanarosa, MDSenior Editor: IndividualAuthor

Copyright 1998 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved. Applicable FARS/DFARS Restrictions Apply to Government Use.

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JAMA. 1998;279(23):1875-1875. doi:10-1001/pubs.JAMA-ISSN-0098-7484-279-23-jbk0617
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To the Editor.— Dr West and colleagues1 recently replied to a letter to the editor2 entitled "Pulmonary Function in Space." The reply stated, "It is also regrettable that most of the reports of medical and physiological changes in space in both the United States and USSR/Russia have appeared in non–peer-reviewed publications." This statement is inaccurate. The official journal of the Aerospace Medical Association, Aviation, Space and Environmental Medicine, is the major forum for clinical and scientific articles regarding the space program. Our monthly journal has been published since 1929 and has a rigorous peer review process. The statement by West et al discredits not only Aviation, Space and Environmental Medicine, but also the scientists and clinicians who publish in our journal.

REFERENCES

West  JB, Elliott  AR, Guy  HJB, Prisk  GK. Pulmonary function in space. JAMA. 1998;279275- 276
CrossRef
Vlassov  V. Pulmonary function in space. JAMA. 1998;279275
CrossRef

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West  JB, Elliott  AR, Guy  HJB, Prisk  GK. Pulmonary function in space. JAMA. 1998;279275- 276
CrossRef
Vlassov  V. Pulmonary function in space. JAMA. 1998;279275
CrossRef
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