The journal began publishing on 3 October 1840 as the
Provincial Medical and Surgical Journal and quickly attracted the attention of physicians around the world through its publication of high-quality original research articles and unique case reports. The
BMJs first editors were
P. Hennis Green, lecturer on the diseases of children at the
Hunterian School of Medicine, who also was its founder, and
Robert Streeten of
Worcester, a member of the
Provincial Medical and Surgical Association council. The first issue of the
Provincial Medical and Surgical Journal (
PMSJ) was 16 pages long and contained three simple woodcut illustrations. The longest items were the editors' introductory editorial and a report of the Provincial Medical and Surgical Association's Eastern Branch. Other pages included a condensed version of
Henry Warburton's medical reform bill, book reviews, clinical papers, and case notes. There were columns of advertisements. Inclusive of stamp duty it cost
7d, a price that remained until 1844. In their main article, Green and Streeten noted that they had "received as many advertisements (in proportion to the quantity of letter press) for our first number, as the most popular Medical Journal [
The Lancet], after seventeen years of existence."
The BMJ published the first centrally randomized controlled trial. The journal also carried seminal papers on the causal effects of smoking on health and lung cancer and other causes of death in relation to smoking. For a long time, the journal's sole competitor was
The Lancet, also based in the UK, but with increasing globalization,
The BMJ has faced tough competition from other medical journals, particularly
The New England Journal of Medicine and the
Journal of the American Medical Association, now known as JAMA. In 1980, the journal split in two parts -
British medical journal (Clinical research edition) [ISSN 0267-0623] and
British medical journal (Practice observed edition) [ISSN 0267-0631]. == Journal content ==