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How to Get your Article Published in eJIAS

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Title: How to Get your Article Published in eJIAS


1
Skills Building Workshop
PUBLISH OR PERISHStrengthening the Skills of
Developing World Investigators to Publish their
Research/Project Findings
Mark A Wainberg Elly Katabira Rodney Kort Barb
Koloshuk
2
Workshop Objectives
  • Increase knowledge of the role of eJIAS in
    supporting research from the developing world
  • Increase understanding of ms requirements and
    peer review process for scientific journals
  • Strengthen skills in manuscript preparation

3
Skills Building Workshop
electornic Journal of the International AIDS
Society (eJIAS)
Mark A Wainberg Rodney Kort
4
eJIAS Mission
  • to recognize, support, and promote essential and
    innovative HIV/AIDS research, prevention, and
    care efforts in developing countries

5
eJIAS Objectives
  • 1. To provide a prominent, accessible, and
    prestigious forum for the publication of
    original, peer-reviewed articles that advance the
    field of HIV/AIDS in developing countries
  • 2. To encourage and facilitate publication by
    scientists and clinicians working in developing
    countries
  • 3. To improve the dissemination of high-quality
    medical evidence from research conducted in a
    diversity of geographic, cultural, socioeconomic,
    and clinical settings
  • 4. To enable scientists and healthcare personnel
    to remain informed about research, analysis and
    opinion relevant to the delivery of HIV/AIDS
    prevention, treatment, and care in developing
    countries

6
eJIAS
  • eJIAS co-published with Medscape on MedGenMed
  • publishing platform for high quality medical
    information that uses the internet as its medium
    because it is better, faster, and cheaper than
    any other medium
  • Articles published in eJIAS are available at no
    cost to readers or authors

7
eJIAS Publishes
  • Research study results
  • Review articles
  • Case reports
  • Editorials
  • Letters to the editor

8
Medscape General Medicine MGMeJIAS Editorial
Staff
9
eJIAS Statistics
  • 21 articles have been published (2005-2006)
  • 21 submissions have been rejected
  • 9 manuscripts are currently under review

10
eJIAS Readership
11
Workshops/Mentoring
  • Training workshops are aimed at strengthening the
    conceptualization, manuscript development and
    peer-review skills of young investigators from
    resource-limited settings
  • 3rd IAS Conference on HIV Pathogenesis and
    Treatment
  • Eastern European and Central Asian AIDS
    Conference
  • XVI International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2006)
  • Online abstract mentoring programme new
    investigators linked to experienced researchers
    in the developed and developing world

12
Skills Building WorkshopHow to Write a Paper
for Publication
XVI International AIDS Conference13 18 August
2006
  • Dr. Elly Katabira
  • eJIAS Co-Editor-in-Chief

13
Study Design
  • The most important factors affecting manuscript
    publication are the design and implementation of
    the research or study and the analysis of the
    data

14
Title Page
  • Write the papers title
  • List study authors (including highest degrees
    attained)
  • List the institution of each author (using
    footnotes to list institutional affiliation)

15
Abstract
  • A brief summary of the manuscript
  • No information appears in the abstract that does
    not also appear in the body
  • See specific formatting requirements for each
    journal

16
Introduction
  • Provide a brief discussion of the general topic
    (why is it important?)
  • Provide a brief discussion of prior work by you
    and/or others
  • Provide an explicit statement of your study
    question/hypothesis

17
Group WorkTitle Page, Abstract, Introduction
  • Identify the components of the title page,
    abstract and introduction
  • Are they all there?
  • What is missing?
  • Is there information that belongs in another
    section?
  • Identify the objectives of the study
  • How could these sections be improved?
  • Identify what the authors have done particularly
    well

18
Methods
  • Describe your study site
  • Describe your study population (source,
    inclusion, and exclusion criteria)
  • Describe your recruitment methods in detail
  • Describe your intervention (if an interventional
    study)
  • Describe the data that you collected and how it
    was collected
  • Describe your data analysis in detail (dependent
    variables, independent variables, comparisons,
    primary and secondary analysis, statistical
    methods used, P-value accepted as significant,
    etc.)

19
Group WorkMethods
  • Identify the components of the materials/ methods
    section
  • Are they all there?
  • What is missing?
  • Is there information that belongs in another
    section?
  • Identify areas of the study design that were
    innovative and areas that could be improved

20
Results
  • Describe main analysis results (Do not repeat
    table data describe the table data in
    qualitative terms, where possible)
  • Provide relevant statistical information report
    statistical significance or lack thereof (again,
    do not repeat table data)
  • Describe secondary analysis results (again, do
    not repeat table data)

21
Group WorkResults
  • Identify the components of the results section
  • Are they all there?
  • What is missing?
  • Is there information that belongs in another
    section?
  • How could this section be improved?
  • What have the authors done particularly well?

22
Discussion
  • Write down the most important take-home point
    that you want the reader to remember
  • Write down the second most important take-home
    point and discuss it
  • Write down the third most important take-home
    point and discuss it
  • List and discuss the studys limitations
  • Write down your conclusions (usually a version of
    the first take-home point that you want the
    reader to remember)
  • Give future directions (often the next study you
    want to do following this one)

23
Group WorkDiscussion
  • Identify all components of the discussion
  • Are they all there?
  • What is missing?
  • Is there information that belongs in another
    section?
  • Do the authors use different headings for this
    section?
  • How could this section be improved?
  • What have the authors done particularly well?

24
Figures and Tables
25
Group WorkFigures and Tables
  • Identify different components of the figures and
    tables
  • Are they labeled adequately?
  • Are the figures and tables described in the text?
  • Is there numerical information in the text that
    is not summarized in a figure or table?
  • How could these sections be improved?
  • What have the authors done particularly well?

26
Peer-Review Process
  • Editors-in-chief and Executive Editor
  • Reviewers
  • Comments and suggestions to author (rejection or
    revision)
  • Revised manuscript to reviewers
  • Copyediting
  • Author
  • Production
  • Posting

27
Peer Review Experience
  • Group Discussion
  • Problems with manuscript submission?
  • Feedback from peer reviewers?
  • Group discussion/problem solving

28
Advice from Peer Reviewers
  • Are there fatal flaws?
  • Is there sufficient technical content?
  • Is it new?
  • Is it sufficiently important?
  • Is there balanced and proper use of references?
  • Is this article suitable for this journal?
  • Should we suspect conflict of interest?
  • Technical merit (and can it be saved, if flawed?)
  • What do you suggest to improve the manuscript?
  • New experiments
  • New data
  • New technical information
  • Re-writing

29
Final Recommendation
  • Accept as is
  • Accept if suitably revised
  • Revise and reconsider
  • Reject

30
Top 10 Reasons for Failure to Publish
  • Poor study design
  • Picking the wrong journal
  • Incorrect format for journal
  • Not following manuscript preparation guide
  • Poor writing
  • Unnecessary information in discussion
  • Suboptimal results reporting
  • Inadequate description of methods
  • Failure to revise/resubmit after peer review
  • Failure to write/submit full manuscript after
    abstract presentation

Adapted from The Top 10 Reasons Why
Manuscripts Are Not Accepted for Publication
Pierson DJ, Respiratory Care, Oct. 2004, 4910.
31
Resources
  • Cetin S, Hackman D. An Approach to the Writing of
    a Scientific Manuscript
  • Journal of Surgical Research 128, 165-167 (2005)
  • Reporting Randomized Clinical Trials
  • Moher D. Schultz KF, Altman DG. The CONSORT
    statement revised recommendations for improving
    the quality of reports of parallel group
    randomized trials
  • BMC Medical Research Methodology 2001, 12
  • http//www.biomemdcentral.com/1471-2288/1/2
  • Translation of CONSORT statement into Russian and
    other languages http//www.constort-statement.org
    /translations/translation.htm
  • Ioannidis JPA, Evans SJW, Gotzsche PC, et al, for
    the CONSORT Group. Better reporting of Harms in
    Randomized Trials An Extension of the CONSORT
    Statement
  • Annals of Internal Medicine 2004 141781-788
  • http//www.annalsorg/cgi/content/abstract/141/10/
    781

32
Submitting Manuscripts to eJIAS
  • See Instructions to Authors
  • www.eJIAS.org
  • Or submit directly to
  • ejias_at_medscape.net
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