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olga nikolaevna [1]
3 years ago
11

In the chart "what the average teen buys", what were the top 3

English
1 answer:
seraphim [82]3 years ago
5 0
Where I’d the chart?
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It all started when someone sent an unsolicited essay to the Journal of the American

Medical Association last year. It could have happened to any publication. Newspapers,

magazines and scientific and medical journals get manuscripts they haven't commissioned

all the time. The difference in this case was the subject matter of the essay. The essay—500

words or so—was a first-person account of how a groggy gynecology resident in an

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20-year-old ovarian cancer patient. The resident ended her pain by giving her what he

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choices when they get a piece like this. Dr. George Lundberg, a physician and the editor of

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Lundberg plunked the piece into the essay section of the January 8 edition of JAMA

without listing the author's name, without verifying that the event actually took place, and

without running a preface explaining why he was publishing the essay or that he was

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Lundberg later explained that he wanted to stir up a debate over a controversial

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through his actions and statements, he illustrated that editors of medical and scientific

journals operate in a culture that is largely foreign to the world of journalists who gather

news for a general audience.

The 105-year-old Journal of the American Medical Association, published in Chicago,

claims to be the most widely circulated medical publication in the world, with 383,000

readers of the English language edition and 250,000 readers of its 10 foreign-language

editions. Published by the most powerful doctors' organization in the country, JAMA also is

one of two top medical publications in the United States. The popular press looks to JAMA

and the New England 10urnal of Medicine each week for the latest medical news.

JAMA's January 8 edition was no exception. Graced with a portrait of a woman by the

19th-century painter Ingres on its cover, JAMA included two items many newspapers picked

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“Debbie” appeared in a section called “A Piece of My Mind,” which Lundberg portrays

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matters are published.

Lundberg refuses to reveal many specifics of the editorial process, and he forbids

interviews with his staff. But he does note that JAMA articles are put through a peer-review

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about the number of JAMA staffers who opposed publishing the piece.

He also declines to say whether he asked lawyers for the AMA to review the piece.

However, Kirk Johnson, the AMA's general counsel, said Lundberg didn't discuss the essay

with him prior to publication.

Lundberg also refuses to say whether he consulted with medical ethicists in advance of

publication, though AMA attorney Johnson said the essay had been reviewed by an ethicist.

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