Well Described Submit a report
Now accepting first reports Peer-reviewed Open access Continuous

There are no diseases, only patients — and only they can describe it.

A peer-reviewed, digital-only journal of first-person illness accounts, written by the clinicians who lived them. We publish what instruments cannot measure: the felt texture of symptom, surgery, and recovery.

0 fees
while we index
same day
accepted → published
6
new article types
all
specialties welcome
Pain: burning
Recovery logged
Specimen entry ICD-11 8B43
Objective · what the chart records
Bilateral C6 dysesthesia; hand intrinsics intact.
Subjective · what the body reports
My palms feel as if coated in a thin film of oil — sensation present, but read through a glove that isn’t there.
Quality: oily Onset: insidious Day-to-Dx: 94 Trigger: none
Author: orthopaedic surgeon Prospective Log
§ 01 — Why we exist

Two readers we write for: the clinician at the bedside, and the machine learning to listen.

Objective data remains essential. But the structured recording of subjective experience has been neglected — and that omission costs us twice. It costs us at the bedside, and it starves the diagnostic tools of the future of the one thing they cannot infer: what illness actually feels like.

READER A

Teach physicians what it feels like to be a patient

Bridge the gap between clinical signs and human reality — the sensations, progressions, and subtle changes standard descriptions overlook. The wisdom that cannot be queried in a database.

READER B

A high-fidelity library for AI diagnosis

AI doesn’t know the difference between a wet bronchial cough and a dry tickle. As a clinician you know the mechanism; as a human you know the feeling. Connect them — and teach the machine what it feels like to be alive.

No publication bias, by design. We require no novelty and no result — positive or negative. The only acceptance criterion is that a lived phenomenon is well described. Authored only by licensed clinicians who have personally lived the condition.

§ 02 — Editor’s introduction

How can I be certain that my red is your red?

As a child, I used to wonder what it felt like to have a beard. My own face was smooth and soft. My father’s face, if he hadn’t shaved for a day or two, felt rough and scratchy — it hurt my hand to touch it. Didn’t it hurt him, too?

My grandfather was a giant of a man, strong enough to lift things I couldn’t even budge. Yet whenever he tried to stand from his armchair, he would groan and clutch his lower back. I could spring out of bed and run across the room in three seconds; it took him minutes just to get on his feet. I simply couldn’t grasp the sensation of his reality.

When I was six I wanted to put the radio on the balcony so everyone could hear it. “People would be disturbed,” my father said. That was the day I learned not everyone likes the same things — my first lesson in subjectivity.

Throughout my medical career, I realized clinical knowledge often fails to capture this sensory landscape. When I passed a kidney stone in medical school, I tried to explain the agonizing, nauseating waves of cramping to a resident. He knew the pathophysiology, but having never experienced it, he couldn’t comprehend the agony. A urologist who has never passed a stone knows the condition — but not the nuances of suffering.

The turning point arrived when I became a patient again, this time with cervical myelopathy. Despite being an orthopedic surgeon, I mistook my own numbness for carpal tunnel syndrome, delaying my diagnosis for months. During recovery I realized even my own surgeon and colleagues didn’t fully grasp the strange symptoms I was describing. I couldn’t find these details in any textbook. I encountered them only in the depths of online health forums, where ordinary patients shared their experiences with one another.

When you are a physician, you think you know illnesses. This is a form of educated arrogance. It takes becoming a patient to realize you understand the nuance of disease far better than the doctors treating you. As junior doctors, we dismissed elderly patients who described pain “twisting like a snake.” Yet those descriptions were perfect clues. By pushing aside anecdotal teaching for strict evidence-based medicine, we lost a wisdom that cannot be queried in a database.

That is why Well Described was born — to collect high-fidelity descriptions of bodily functions, sensations, and diseases, written by the world’s only true experts on the subject: the patients. Not just any patients — those who themselves work in medicine.

§ 03 — New to the literature

Concepts built for subjective data — found in no other journal.

Conventional case reports were built for objective findings. We invented new article types, new evidence levels, and new safeguards so the felt dimension of illness can finally be recorded with rigor.

Format · Tier I

The Retrospective Case

The author lived the illness in the past and describes it from memory — a foundational account, honest that memory reconstructs events rather than replaying them.

Use when: the illness is already behind you.
Format · Tier II

The Prospective Log

An illness diary kept in the moment of experience. Higher quality precisely because it mitigates recall bias — the symptom recorded as it happened, not as remembered.

Higher fidelity: captured before memory revises it.
Format

The Dual-View Commentary

Anchor a subjective account in objective analysis without diluting it. An orthopedic surgeon writes about their own depression; a psychiatrist adds a sidebar on the neurobiology of the symptoms described.

Subjective narrative + expert sidebar.
Safeguard

Verified Pseudonymity

For stigmatized conditions, the Editor-in-Chief verifies identity, license, and records internally — then publishes under a pseudonym, so fear of licensure repercussions never silences an account.

Published as: “a board-certified anesthesiologist.”
Format · short

The Physiological Micro-Report

For a single bodily function rather than a whole illness: the itch from two distinct insect bites, numbness from two anesthetics, the burning of micturition after a specific drug. Small, precise, important.

One sensation, described completely.
Structured fields

Ontology & Timeline tags

Every entry is coded for machine and clinician alike: ICD-11 code, symptom-ontology tags, and timeline integers — structured so the archive is searchable and machine-readable from day one.

e.g. Pain: Burning · Onset: Acute · Days-to-Dx: 14
§ 04 — Levels of evidence

Borrowed from clinical trials, rebuilt for lived experience.

Standard studies are classified as retrospective or prospective. We bring the same distinction to the case report — because memory reconstructs events rather than replaying them.

Tier I · Retrospectiverecall-dependent

The Retrospective Case

Written after the fact, from memory. Valuable and welcome — the account most clinicians can offer about an illness already behind them.

Recall-bias mitigation
Tier II · Prospectiverecorded live

The Prospective Log

A diary kept during the illness itself. Higher fidelity, because the sensation is captured before memory can revise it.

Recall-bias mitigation
§ 05 — How the journal runs

Digital-only. Published the day it’s accepted. Free while we earn our index.

No print, no issues, no waiting for a publication window. A case accepted on a Tuesday is published that Tuesday. And until we are formally indexed, every manuscript is published at no cost to the author.

No publication interval

Conventional journals batch articles into monthly or quarterly issues. We don’t. Each account goes live the moment it clears peer review — any day, any specialty.

Accepted → published same day

Built for the archive, not the shelf

A permanent, searchable, structured repository — designed from the first entry to be read by clinicians and parsed by machines, never bound and stored.

Format: structured + open

No fees until we’re indexed

For the first years, before indexing, publication is entirely free. We begin to charge only once the journal is indexed — and reviewer credits offset that cost when we do.

Founding window: $0 to publish
Now — the founding window

Totally free to publish

Every manuscript, every author, no charge. This is the period we’re collecting our first reports and building toward indexing.

$0 — all submissions
After indexing

A modest fee — discounted by credits

Once indexed, a publication fee applies. Reviewers who’ve earned credits apply them here to publish at a reduced price.

Fee − reviewer credits
§ 06 — Reviewer credits

Review an account, earn credit toward your own.

Peer review is the labor that holds a journal together — so we reward it directly. Each review you complete earns credit points. When publication fees begin after indexing, you spend those points to publish at a discounted price.

The clinicians who give the most to the archive are the ones who pay the least into it. That is the whole idea.

1 review completed = credit toward publishing
Accept a review

Take on a manuscript in your specialty through the editorial desk.

Complete it + credits

A thorough, on-time review adds credit points to your reviewer account.

Bank your balance

Points accrue across every review you complete — there’s no expiry race.

Redeem for discounted publishing

Once fees apply post-indexing, spend credits to lower — or offset — the cost of publishing your own account.

§ 07 — From experience to archive

How your account becomes part of the record.

In this first version of the journal, the path is deliberately direct — your manuscript reaches a human editor, not a form.

01

Write

Document chronology, sensations, treatments, and reflections — clinical accuracy from a living perspective, not literary embellishment.

02

Document

Attach the full diagnostic record — labs, imaging, and clinical notes that verify the diagnosis behind the experience.

03

Email it in

Send everything to the editorial desk. Choose your article type and note any request for verified pseudonymity.

04

Published — same day as accepted

After peer review, your account goes live immediately and joins a permanent, structured, openly accessible archive.

§ 08 — What each account contains

Six things we look for in every manuscript.

Each submission must include a verified diagnosis, a precise chronology, qualitative description — often compared with other conditions known to the author — and a record of treatments and their effects.

Chronology of symptoms

Exact onset sequence and temporal evolution — first signs to current state or full recovery timeline.

Comparisons to known sensations

Contrast each symptom with other conditions the author has felt — “sharper but shorter than my prior tendinitis.”

Effects of treatment

Medications and procedures — timing, intensity, benefits, drawbacks, and unexpected consequences alike.

Triggers & modifiers

Activities or environments that aggravate or relieve symptoms, and how predictable those patterns are.

Sensory aspects of care

The taste of a medication, the pain of an injection, the discomfort of physiotherapy — recorded precisely.

Psychological course & key reflections

Emotional states through the illness, plus 3–5 points on what colleagues should learn — and what you’d have missed as a doctor.

§ 09 — Standards & ethics

Human-centered, but held to academic standards.

The goal is a permanent, standardized archive that reflects the subjective human dimension of medical care while meeting the rigor of the literature.

Documentation required

Every diagnosis is supported by complete medical records — labs, imaging, and clinical notes from the illness period.

Consent & confidentiality

Authors consent to publication of the medical and personal information they include — and verified pseudonymity protects the vulnerable.

Honest use of AI tools

Non-native English speakers may refine language with AI — but tools must never invent or alter any experiential detail. The voice stays the author’s.

§ 10 — Questions

Before you submit.

Does my case need to be rare or novel?
No. Unlike conventional case reports, submissions are not required to present novel diseases, rare syndromes, or groundbreaking findings. The primary acceptance criterion is simply that the phenomenon you lived is well described. This also means we carry no inherent publication bias — we require no particular result.
Who is eligible to submit?
Licensed healthcare professionals — physicians, dentists, nurses, or other clinical practitioners — who have personally experienced the illness or intervention being described, with the diagnosis supported by complete medical documentation.
What does it cost to publish?
During the founding window — the first years, before the journal is indexed — publication is entirely free for every author. Once indexed, a modest publication fee will apply, and reviewer credits can be used to reduce or offset it.
How does the reviewer credit system work?
Each peer review you complete earns credit points that accrue in your reviewer account. When publication fees begin after indexing, you redeem those points to publish your own accounts at a discounted price — so the most active reviewers pay the least to publish.
How often do you publish?
Continuously. There is no fixed publication interval — the journal is digital-only, and each account goes live the same day it clears peer review. Any day can bring a new case.
I have a stigmatized condition. Can I publish anonymously?
Yes — through Verified Pseudonymity. The Editor-in-Chief verifies your identity, license, and records internally, and the account is published under a descriptor such as “a board-certified anesthesiologist,” so concern over licensure repercussions need not silence the account.
May I use AI to improve my English?
Yes. Non-native English speakers are encouraged to refine clarity and precision with AI-based tools — provided the tools never invent or alter experiential detail, and the final wording remains fully faithful to your authentic experience.
Call for first reports

Illness, described as only the patient–clinician can.

If you are a healthcare professional who has lived through illness, your account can help create a resource that benefits today’s clinicians and shapes the diagnostic tools of the future.

We are opening with a search for our first reports. In this first version of the journal, manuscripts are received by email — and reviewed personally by the editorial desk.

Who can submit
  • Physicians, dentists, nurses, or other licensed clinical practitioners.
  • The author must have personally experienced the illness described.
  • Diagnosis supported by complete documentation — labs, imaging, records.
  • Manuscripts in English; AI editing permitted, but it must never alter experiential detail.
Submit by email v1 · email intake

Send your account directly

No portal yet — and that’s deliberate. Your first report reaches a human editor, not a form.

Manuscripts tosubmissions@welldescribed.org
Include in your email
  1. A working title naming you as both patient and clinician.
  2. Your manuscript — chronology, sensations, treatments, reflections.
  3. Full diagnostic documentation supporting the diagnosis.
  4. Article type: Retrospective Case, Prospective Log, Dual-View, or Micro-Report.
  5. Note if you request verified pseudonymity.
Open email to submit
Founding window — publication is currently free. Non-native English speakers are encouraged to refine their language, provided the final work reflects only their authentic experience.