With its advent in 2018, the publishers and editors of JAMA Network Open confronted the risky proposition as to whether a high-volume, open access journal could be successful while maintaining the same standards as the most highly respected medical journals. Now, 6 years on, the answer is clear. Submissions to the journal have grown steadily, reaching nearly 15 000 in 2023, 14% more than in 2022. The reach of the journal has become global. Two-thirds of submissions originate from 82 countries outside the United States, particularly China, Korea, Taiwan, Canada, Japan, the United Kingdom, Germany, and France. We published 2187 articles in 2023, with an acceptance rate of 12% for research studies and 15% overall. Even given this volume, the quality and importance of the articles we published remained high, as reflected by the journal Impact Factor of 13.8, making JAMA Network Open the leading large-volume open access general medical journal in the world. Moreover, there were more than 30 million article views and downloads and 73 000 mentions in the news media last year, and the journal has more than 43 000 social media followers. The remarkable success of JAMA Network Open clearly validates the notion that an open access journal can reliably deliver the highest quality science as full-content articles to the world without compromise and without cost to readers.We firmly believe that much of the success of JAMA Network Open is due to an unwavering commitment to the journal's mission, "to improve health, health care, and health equity worldwide through open access dissemination of high quality, innovative, general medical research and commentary by and for a broad range of clinicians, researchers, policy makers, and public health and health care leaders." 1 In keeping with this charge, JAMA Network Open covers a remarkably broad range of topics on health and health care of worldwide importance and interest. 2-10 For example, as seen in the Table, popular studies published in 2023 focused on clinical topics such as alcohol intake, 2 sleep patterns, 3 and stroke. 8 We continue to receive nearly 3000 submissions annually that are related to SARS-CoV-2, and this topic continues to be of great interest to our readers, as evidenced by the studies with the highest Altmetric scores 5-7 (Table ). Our focus has evolved along with the pandemic. We are most interested in studies that contribute important information about new, emerging trends in SARS-CoV2 infection; rigorous studies on the etiology, epidemiology, and clinical manifestations of post-COVID-19 condition; and intervention trials of treatments for this post-COVID-19 condition that include appropriate control groups. We are also interested in evaluations of interventions that increase vaccination rates or address other avenues for preventing disease, especially among highrisk populations.We remain deeply committed to addressing racism in medicine, health care, and society both in the US and abroad, 11 as is the JAMA Network as a whole. This past year, under the leade...