From National Bulletin to International Cardiologic Journal

    Authors

    DOI

    https://doi.org/10.15836/ccar.2015.111

    Full Text

    Cardiovascular diseases have long been the leading cause of death throughout the world and in Croatia as well. The Croatian Cardiac Society (CCS) was founded in 1992 and, as the leading professional association in Croatia, strives to reduce the morbidity and mortality from these groups of diseases, primarily through the interaction of the education of its members and the public and the application of diagnostics and treatment equally throughout Croatia, according to evidence-based medical principles. Of the many initiatives that the CCS undertook during the past twenty years, we will mention only a few relevant to the topic of this editorial. In 1998 the study Treatment and secondary prevention of ischemic coronary events in Croatia (TASPIC-CRO study) (1) was started, and the Prevention of coronary heart disease in clinical practice: recommendations of the Task Force of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) were translated into Croatian in 1999 (2). In 2004, members of the CCS Working Group on Acute Coronary Syndrome translated the ESC Guidelines on management of acute myocardial infarction in patients presenting with ST-segment elevation (3). In November of the same year, the Croatian Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Network for patients with ST-segment elevation acute myocardial infarction was established in cooperation with the former Ministry of Health and Social Welfare of the Republic of Croatia, the Croatian Health Insurance Fund, and primary, secondary, and tertiary healthcare institutions. This national program for cardiologic interventions is an extremely successful example of arranging treatment for patients with acute myocardial infarction at the national level (4), and one of the most important topics in modern Croatian cardiology. Soon after, the most important media for communication in Croatian cardiology were formed – in May 2006, the monthly bulletin Kardio list published its first issue, and the web portal of the CCS was reestablished (www.kardio.hr). In addition to regular publications in Croatian, this early period was characterized by clear, concise, verified, applicable, and up-to-date cardiologic information as well as being published in the shape of a perforated envelope. (5) From 2007, the bulletin gradually grew into a journal that was first published in the B5 format, with regular monthly or bimonthly issues in the A4 format in both Croatian and English since 2008. The journal was significantly enhanced by an ESC license to organize educational scientific conferences (Dubrovnik Cardiology Highlights: An ESC Update Programme in Cardiology), inclusion into the network of national cardiologic journals under ESC, and international indexing of the journal in 2009 (EMCare) and 2011 (EBSCO/Academic Search Complete). For better international visibility, the title of the journal was changed from Kardio list to Cardiologia Croatica in early 2012. (6) Further incentive came in July of 2014 when the journal acquired a co-publisher – the established publisher Medicinska naklada, which resulted in the modernization of the journal through the introduction of DOI (Digital Object Identifier) identification system, QR (Quick Response) codes, ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) for authors, and a more advanced graphical design. (7) In the coming months, once all issues since 2013 have been translated to XML, the journal Cardiologia Croatica will upgrade its organization and editorial procedure and then apply to a secondary multidisciplinary bibliographical database.

    Literature

    1. Reiner Z, Mihatov S, Milicic D, Bergovec M, Planinc D, TASPIC-CRO Study Group Investigators. Treatment and secondary prevention of ischemic coronary events in Croatia (TASPIC-CRO study). Eur J Cardiovasc Prev Rehabil. 2006;13(4):646–54. https://doi.org/10.1097/01.hjr.0000183910.59741.96
    2. Vražić H, Bergovec M, Ivanuša M. European Society of Cardiology Guidelines translated by members of Croatian Cardiac Society (1999-2012) [poster]. Cardiol Croat. 2012;7(9-10):e8.
    3. Europsko kardiološko društvo: 2003. Dijagnostika i liječenje akutnog infarkta miokarda s elevacijom ST-spojnice (STEMI). Zagreb: Hrvatsko kardiološko društvo; 2004.
    4. Nikolić Heitzler V, Babic Z, Milicic D, Bergovec M, Raguz M, Mirat J, et al. Results of the Croatian Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Network for patients with ST-segment elevation acute myocardial infarction. Am J Cardiol. 2010;105(9):1261–7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amjcard.2009.12.041
    5. Ivanuša M Sa zaslona računala jednog od urednika: Značaj glasila Hrvatskoga kardiološkog društva. Kardio list. 2006;1(1):3.
    6. Ivanuša M. The Croatia Cardiac Society and its two educational resources, the journal Cardiologia Croatica and the web portal Kardio.hr. Eur Heart J. 2013;34(44):3391. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24400365/
    7. Ivanuša M. Cardiologia Croatica and the application of advanced information technology in publishing. Cardiol Croat. 2014;9(7-8):283–8. https://doi.org/10.15836/ccar.2014.283
    Cardiologia Croatica
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    From National Bulletin to International Cardiologic Journal

    Editorial
    Issue5-6
    Published
    Pages111-112
    PDF via DOIhttps://doi.org/10.15836/ccar.2015.111

    Authors

    Mario Ivanuša*ORCIDCardiologia Croatica, Croatian Cardiac Society, Croatia

    *Correspondence email: mivanusa@gmail.com

    Full Text

    Cardiovascular diseases have long been the leading cause of death throughout the world and in Croatia as well. The Croatian Cardiac Society (CCS) was founded in 1992 and, as the leading professional association in Croatia, strives to reduce the morbidity and mortality from these groups of diseases, primarily through the interaction of the education of its members and the public and the application of diagnostics and treatment equally throughout Croatia, according to evidence-based medical principles.

    Of the many initiatives that the CCS undertook during the past twenty years, we will mention only a few relevant to the topic of this editorial. In 1998 the study Treatment and secondary prevention of ischemic coronary events in Croatia (TASPIC-CRO study) (1) was started, and the Prevention of coronary heart disease in clinical practice: recommendations of the Task Force of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) were translated into Croatian in 1999 (2). In 2004, members of the CCS Working Group on Acute Coronary Syndrome translated the ESC Guidelines on management of acute myocardial infarction in patients presenting with ST-segment elevation (3). In November of the same year, the Croatian Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Network for patients with ST-segment elevation acute myocardial infarction was established in cooperation with the former Ministry of Health and Social Welfare of the Republic of Croatia, the Croatian Health Insurance Fund, and primary, secondary, and tertiary healthcare institutions. This national program for cardiologic interventions is an extremely successful example of arranging treatment for patients with acute myocardial infarction at the national level (4), and one of the most important topics in modern Croatian cardiology. Soon after, the most important media for communication in Croatian cardiology were formed – in May 2006, the monthly bulletin Kardio list published its first issue, and the web portal of the CCS was reestablished (www.kardio.hr). In addition to regular publications in Croatian, this early period was characterized by clear, concise, verified, applicable, and up-to-date cardiologic information as well as being published in the shape of a perforated envelope. (5) From 2007, the bulletin gradually grew into a journal that was first published in the B5 format, with regular monthly or bimonthly issues in the A4 format in both Croatian and English since 2008.

    The journal was significantly enhanced by an ESC license to organize educational scientific conferences (Dubrovnik Cardiology Highlights: An ESC Update Programme in Cardiology), inclusion into the network of national cardiologic journals under ESC, and international indexing of the journal in 2009 (EMCare) and 2011 (EBSCO/Academic Search Complete). For better international visibility, the title of the journal was changed from Kardio list to Cardiologia Croatica in early 2012. (6) Further incentive came in July of 2014 when the journal acquired a co-publisher – the established publisher Medicinska naklada, which resulted in the modernization of the journal through the introduction of DOI (Digital Object Identifier) identification system, QR (Quick Response) codes, ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) for authors, and a more advanced graphical design. (7)

    In the coming months, once all issues since 2013 have been translated to XML, the journal Cardiologia Croatica will upgrade its organization and editorial procedure and then apply to a secondary multidisciplinary bibliographical database.

    Literature

    1. 1.
      Reiner Z, Mihatov S, Milicic D, Bergovec M, Planinc D, TASPIC-CRO Study Group Investigators. Treatment and secondary prevention of ischemic coronary events in Croatia (TASPIC-CRO study). Eur J Cardiovasc Prev Rehabil. 2006;13(4):646–54.DOI
    2. 2.
      Vražić H, Bergovec M, Ivanuša M. European Society of Cardiology Guidelines translated by members of Croatian Cardiac Society (1999-2012) [poster]. Cardiol Croat. 2012;7(9-10):e8.
    3. 3.
      Europsko kardiološko društvo: 2003. Dijagnostika i liječenje akutnog infarkta miokarda s elevacijom ST-spojnice (STEMI). Zagreb: Hrvatsko kardiološko društvo; 2004.
    4. 4.
      Nikolić Heitzler V, Babic Z, Milicic D, Bergovec M, Raguz M, Mirat J, et al. Results of the Croatian Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Network for patients with ST-segment elevation acute myocardial infarction. Am J Cardiol. 2010;105(9):1261–7.DOI
    5. 5.
      Ivanuša M Sa zaslona računala jednog od urednika: Značaj glasila Hrvatskoga kardiološkog društva. Kardio list. 2006;1(1):3.
    6. 6.
      Ivanuša M. The Croatia Cardiac Society and its two educational resources, the journal Cardiologia Croatica and the web portal Kardio.hr. Eur Heart J. 2013;34(44):3391.PubMed
    7. 7.
      Ivanuša M. Cardiologia Croatica and the application of advanced information technology in publishing. Cardiol Croat. 2014;9(7-8):283–8.DOI