"Any unexplained phenomenon passes through three stages before the reality of it is accepted. During the first stage it is considered laughable. During the second stage, it is adamantly opposed. Finally, during the third stage, it is accepted as self-evident. "


Keeping up with relevant research

March 18, 2013

I average a little over three hours weekly scanning medical and psychological journals on the internet. Typically I zoom through the article titles looking for anything relevant to stress, health & wellbeing. If something seems interesting, I read the article's abstract.  I may well then download it to my bibliographic database - I use EndNote. Currently I have well over 19,000 references stored and the number grows steadily.  Sometimes I'll get hold of the text of the full article - by subscribing to the journal, buying the article, searching for the author's academic website, or emailing the corresponding author directly.  I use this information I glean to improve my treatment of clients who come to me for help, and as a basis for talks and articles.

I also send monthly lists of relevant articles to four groups I'm involved with - the charity Action on Depression Scotland, accredited members of the British Association for Behavioural & Cognitive Psychotherapies (BABCP), the journal editor of the British Holistic Medical Association (BHMA), and members of the BABCP special interest group on Compassion.  I post copies of these four mailings onto this blog each month too under the heading "Recent research: articles from ... journals".

I routinely scan over 50 journals (see below for the current mix) and I also scatter-gun out from there following up leads to other interesting research. It may all seem a lot, and it is ... but I'm very lucky to be fascinated by this emerging research. I quite often get the same kind of excited pleasure from opening up these journals as I used to as a kid when I got my hands on a new comic.

Weekly journals: British Medical Journal; Journal of the American Medical Association.

Fortnightly journals: Psychiatric News

Monthly journals: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition; American Journal of PsychiatryBehavior Research and Therapy; BMC PsychiatryBritish Journal of Psychiatry; British Journal of Sports Medicine; British Psychological Society Research DigestCochrane Library; Greater Good DigestsJAMA PsychiatryJournal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry; Journal of Clinical PsychiatryJournal of Personality and Social Psychology; Journal of Psychosomatic ResearchJournal of Sexual Medicine; Mindfulness Research Guide; Psychological Medicine; Psychological Science; Psychiatric ServicesPsychosomatic Medicine; Social Indicators Research 

Every two months: Academic Psychiatry; Attachment & Human DevelopmentBehavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy; Behavior Modification; Biopsychosocial MedicineBipolar Disorders; BMC Psychology; Cognitive Therapy and ResearchEmotion; International Journal of WellbeingJournal of Consulting and Clinical PsychologyJournal of Happiness StudiesJournal of Positive Psychology; Journal of Research in Personality; Journal of Traumatic StressPsychotherapy Research; Social Psychological & Personality Science

Every three months: Applied Psychology: Health and Well-BeingBehavior Therapy; Cognitive and Behavioral PracticeCognitive Behaviour TherapistClinical Psychology: Science and PracticeFOCUS; Group Dynamics; Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy; Journal of Marital and Family Therapy; MindfulnessMotivation and Emotion; Personal RelationshipsPsychology of Well-Being