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with a number of other journals in PM&R and general medicine, Archives is taking a proactive stance on the use of reporting guidelines. See the editorial, Elevating the Quality of Disability and Rehabilitation Research: Mandatory Use of the Reporting Guidelines, by Chan, Heinemann, and Roberts. Dr. Heinemann discusses the guidelines in a podcast (http://www.archives-pmr.org/content/podcast_collection) and via AudioSlides (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00039993). Authors should consult the Information for Authors for submission requirements (http://www.archives-pmr.org/content/authorinfo). The latest guideline information can be found at the EQUATOR Network (http://www.equator-network.org). This month’s author podcast features Kristen L. Triebel and Daniel C. Marson discussing see more their article, Recovery Over 6 Months of Medical Decision-Making
Capacity After Traumatic Brain Injury (article on page 2296). Our full collection of podcasts, is available at http://www.archives-pmr.org/content/podcast_collection. AZD9291 in vitro See Returning to School After Traumatic Brain Injury by Wehman and Targett at page 2507. Information/Education pages are designed to provide consumer-friendly information on topics relevant to rehabilitation medicine. Previously published pages are available at http://www.archives-pmr.org/content/infoeducation. Archives appreciates the work of its peer reviewers. Those who contributed to the peer review process April through September 2014 are listed on page 2500. Tsai and colleagues evaluated the effects of sacral magnetic stimulation (SMS) on functional and urodynamic improvement in refractory stress urinary incontinence (SUI). Thirty-four
Thiamine-diphosphate kinase patients were assigned to either an experimental group or a sham group. The experimental group received SMS consisting of 5-Hz, 20-minute treatments administered over the bilateral third sacral roots, with the intensity set at approximately 70% of the maximal output, for 12 consecutive weekdays. The patients in the experimental group exhibited substantial improvement in continence and quality of life, and these improvements persisted for up to 4.5 months after the intervention and were accompanied by urodynamic changes in bladder and urethral measures. The authors conclude that SMS can be used to promote urinary continence in refractory SUI patients, but more research is needed. ■ SEE THE FULL ARTICLE AT PAGE 2231 In a series of papers, Jones and colleagues examine the effects of activity-based therapy (ABT) on neurologic function, walking ability, functional independence, metabolic health, and community participation. A sample of 48 adults with chronic motor-incomplete spinal cord injury (SCI) participated in 9 hours per week of ABT for 24 weeks including: developmental sequencing, resistance training, repetitive, patterned motor activity, and task-specific locomotor training.