万维提示:
1、投稿方式:在线投稿。
2、期刊网址:
https://journals.lww.com/janac/pages/default.aspx
3、投稿网址:
https://www.editorialmanager.com/janac/default.aspx
4、官网邮箱:Kristen@origineditorial.com
5、期刊刊期:双月刊,一年出版六期。
2021年1月28日星期四
投稿须知【官网信息】
JANAC INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUTHORS
MISSION OF THE JOURNAL
The Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care (JANAC) is the official journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care (ANAC). JANAC’s mission is to support nursing practice, research, education, and advocacy through the dissemination of scholarly, cutting-edge, evidence-based, and evolving knowledge and practice standards. JANAC provides a forum for multiprofessional discussions about clinical practice, education, research, prevention, public health, health administration, international health, legal-ethical issues, social issues, health equity, and public policy related to all aspects of HIV infection and its related conditions. JANAC invites original articles that focus on a broad spectrum of issues related to HIV, from the perspectives of nursing, public health, behavioral health, and medicine. Submissions are welcomed from nurses and other health care professionals. We support submissions from multiprofessional teams.
JANAC publishes original articles, focused on HIV infection and related conditions, that:
Create a global forum for authors to share results, methods, innovations, and expert opinions.
Contribute to improved standards of care.
Critically review and advance the state of the science.
Provide an interactive forum for translating evidence-based, clinically-relevant, and peer-reviewed research into practice.
Represent a broad range of clinical care, research, education, and advocacy issues.
Reflect the multiprofessional nature of health and mental health care.
Emphasize the vital roles of nurses in transforming global health, including clinical care, policy development, education, research, and advocacy.
Readers of JANAC include nurses and other health care and social service providers from around the world with an interest in all topics associated with HIV infection and its related conditions.
ETHICAL/LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS
JANAC is a peer-reviewed journal that follows publishing standards set by the American Psychological Association (APA; http://apa.org/) and the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE; http://publicationethics.org/). Although the editors and referees make every effort to ensure the validity of published manuscripts, the final responsibility rests with the authors, not with the Journal, its editors, or the publisher.
A submitted manuscript must be an original contribution not previously published in print or online (except as an abstract, preliminary report, thesis, dissertation, or preprint). If an abstract from a poster or presentation has been published in conference proceedings, the abstract and manuscript submitted to JANAC must be substantially different and provide new information for readers. A preprint may have been posted anytime and anywhere, including on scholarly collaboration networks (scns). If the paper is accepted, to ensure that readers can find and cite the final published version, we encourage researchers to add the digital object identifier (doi) to the posted preprint version. The submitted paper must not be under consideration for publication elsewhere, and, if accepted, must not be published elsewhere in a similar form, in any language, without the consent of Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
JANAC will not allow citations to content that is published in journals that are considered to be predatory. The editors will use the INANE nursing journals directory (available at https://nursingeditors.com/journals-directory/) and the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ; available at https://doaj.org), as well as PubMed, Medline, and other resources to determine the legitimacy of the journals included in a manuscript’s reference list. If an author is suspected of citing predatory content in their manuscript, the editor will ask the author to remove that citation and content from the submission.
Authorship: Each person listed as an author is expected to have participated in the work to a significant extent according to the International Committee for Medical Journal Editors' (ICMJE) authorship criteria. Authorship credit should be based on (a) substantial contributions to conception and design, acquisition of data, or analysis and interpretation of data; (b) drafting the manuscript or revising it critically for important intellectual content; (c) final approval of the version to be published; and (d) agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved. Authors must meet all 4 conditions. (Retrieved from http://www.icmje.org/recommendations/browse/roles-and-responsibilities/defining-the-role-of-authors-and-contributors.html)
Authors must include the contributions of each author in the Acknowledgment section, using the CRediT taxonomy (available at https://casrai.org/credit/). See the example title page in the JANAC style guide.
By signing the Authorship Responsibility, Disclosure, and Copyright Transfer agreement, each author warrants that s/he has participated sufficiently in the intellectual content; the analysis of data, if applicable; and writing of the paper to take public responsibility for it. Each has reviewed the final version of the paper, believes it represents valid work, and approves it for publication. All persons designated as authors should qualify for authorship, and all those who qualify should be listed as authors (according to the ICMJE, see above). Should the editor request the data upon which the work is based, the authors shall produce it.
Justification of assignment of authorship, including details of the role each of the listed authors had in the work, must be provided at the time of submission in the submission letter to the editor. Individuals who have not contributed sufficiently to the manuscript or do not meet the ICMJE criteria should not be included in the author list. These individuals should be named, with a statement of what they contributed to the work, in the Acknowledgments Statement on the Title Page.
Authorship and the order of authors are established in the initial manuscript submission. Any Changes to Authorship after that must be formally requested in a letter listing (a) newly added or deleted authors and/or a change in the order of the previously listed authors, and (b) the reason for the change. All of the manuscript’s originally listed authors (including any who are being removed from the list), as well as any newly-added authors, must sign the request to signify agreement to the change. The corresponding author should email this information to all of the authors and copy the editorial office (Kristen@origineditorial.com). Each author should then reply to all with his/her approval.
Research Participant Anonymity and Informed Consent: It is the responsibility of the author(s) to ensure protection of research participant anonymity and to verify that human subjects investigations were conducted with informed consent, followed all guidelines for human subjects investigations required by the institution(s) with which the authors are affiliated, and, at minimum, in accordance with The Code of Ethics of the World Medical Association (Declaration of Helsinki) for investigations involving human subjects, available at http://www.wma.net/en/30publications/10policies/b3/index.html
Permissions: When using other authors’ works, (e.g., quoted text, modifying or adapting a published table or figure, or re-publishing a tool or questionnaire), even if the source material is not copied exactly, authors must submit written permission from the copyright owner (usually the publisher), along with complete details about the source. (Often the required citation is prescribed by the copyright holder.) Merely referencing the original source may not be enough. It is the sole responsibility of the author(s) to obtain required permissions and to pay all permissions fees that are required by the copyright owner.
Conflicts of Interest: Authors are required to provide full disclosure of actual or potential conflicts of interest relevant to the subject matter of the manuscript that have occurred over the previous 2 years, during the period of time that the submitted work was conducted, and/or that can reasonably be expected to occur in the foreseeable future. Disclosures may include, but are not limited to, grants and funding, employment, affiliations, honoraria, consultancies, board positions, royalties, stock options and ownership, or expert testimony. Unless determined to be important to the review process, disclosures are held confidential until a manuscript is accepted for publication. Disclosure statements appear with all articles published in JANAC. Authors should contact the Managing Editor with questions or concerns, but should err on the side of inclusion when in doubt.
Copyright: Each author must complete and submit the journal's copyright transfer agreement, which includes a section on the disclosure of potential conflicts of interest based on the ICMJE recommendations, "Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals" (www.icmje.org/update.html).
A copy of the form is made available to the corresponding author within the Editorial Manager submission platform. Upon submission, co-authors will automatically receive an email with instructions for completing the form.
Compliance with NIH/other research funding agency accessibility requirements. Many funding agencies require or request authors to submit the post-print (the article after peer review and acceptance but not the final published article) to a repository that is publicly accessible online without charge. As a service to our authors, LWW will identify National Library of Medicine (NLM) articles that require deposit and will transmit the post-print of an article to PubMed Central based on research funded in whole or in part by the National Institutes of Health, Wellcome Trust, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, or other funding agencies. The Copyright Transfer Agreement document provides the mechanism for this process.
Data Sharing and Transparency
“Authors are expected to retain the data associated with a published article in accordance with institutional requirements; funder requirements; participant agreements; and, when publishing in an APA journal . . .” (APA, 2020, p.13). This allows for open science and other researchers to confirm the reported analyses. Authors can place their anonymized data (participant identity must be protected) in repositories for archival, providing a link and DOI to those data or manage requests personally, as received. “Data-sharing arrangements must be entered into with proper consideration of the rights of the copyright owner, participants’ consent, requirements of funding agencies, requirements of IRBs and other ethics committees that provided permission to conduct the study, and rules promulgated by the employer of the holder of the data” (APA, 2020, p. 15). Authors bear any costs associated with data sharing.
Plagiarism Prevention: JANAC uses iThenticate© to detect similarities between submitted papers and previously published materials, including information published on the Internet. We will not review submissions with excessive similarities to other publications, including those authored by the individuals submitting the manuscript to JANAC (self-plagiarism).
Multiple Publications from one Study: It is not uncommon to produce more than one paper from one data set/study. In these circumstances, each paper must represent a clearly unique use of the data and be presented in a manner that avoids any perception of self-plagiarism. JANAC requires that authors who submit a paper using data from a previously-published work discuss the following in the body of the manuscript: (a) information about the previously-published work, including a citation and reference to the original article, as well as citations and references to other articles published from the original data, as pertinent to the submitted manuscript; (b) how the data used in the submission were analyzed and how (or if) the current analysis differs from analysis in the original article; (c) a description of the participants in the submission and how (or if) the participants differ from those in the original article; and (d) a clear and specific statement about how the submitted work differs from other publications from the study and why the further use of these data is appropriate.
OPEN ACCESS
Authors of accepted peer-reviewed manuscripts have the option of paying a fee to allow perpetual unrestricted online access to the published article to readers globally. To ensure that this option has no influence on the peer review and acceptance process, authors may select the open access option at the point of acceptance. All submitted manuscripts are subject to the journal's standard peer-review process and will be accepted or rejected based on their own merit.
An article processing charge (APC) is requested upon acceptance of the manuscript and should be paid within 30 days by the author, funding agency, or institution. Payment must be processed for the article to be published open access. For a list of journals and pricing, please visit the Wolters Kluwer Open Health Journals page.
Authors Retain Copyright: Authors retain the copyright for all articles they opt to publish as open access. Authors grant LWW an exclusive license to publish the article and the article is made available under the terms of a Creative Commons user license. Please visit the Open Access Publication Process page for more information.
Creative Commons License: Open access articles are freely available to read, download, and share from the time of publication under the terms of the Creative Commons License Attribution-NonCommerical No Derivative (CC BY-NC-ND) license. This license does not permit reuse for any commercial purpose, nor does it permit the reuse or modification of individual elements of the work (i.e., figures, tables) in the creation of derivative works without specific permission.
Compliance with Funder Mandated Open Access Policies: An author whose work is funded by an organization that mandates the use of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license may meet that requirement through the available open access license for approved funders. Information about the approved funders can be found at http://www.wkopenhealth.com/inst-fund.php
FAQ for Open Access: http://www.wkopenhealth.com/openaccessfaq.php
CLINICAL TRIALS
As of June 1, 2019, JANAC will require that clinical trials submitted for review and possible publication are registered in clinicaltrials.gov (or equivalent) prior to submission of the paper. As of June 1, 2020, JANAC will require that any submissions coming from clinical trials are registered before enrollment of the first patient. The registration number should be included in a note on the title page.
The National Institutes of Health define a clinical trial as, “a research study in which one or more human participants are prospectively assigned to one or more interventions (which may include placebo or other control) to evaluate the effects of those interventions on health-related biomedical or behavioral outcomes.” (https://grants.nih.gov/policy/clinical-trials/CT-Definition-Case-Studies_1.17.18.pdf). Cohort, retrospective, and observational studies without an intervention do not require registration. Studies of human subjects with prospective assignment of an intervention by the investigators, however, must be registered, regardless of the size of the trial (http://www.who.int/ictrp/en).
REPORTING GUIDELINES
JANAC requires that authors use the following industry-recognized reporting guidelines to assure that minimum reporting requirements are met. The checklist for each guideline must be uploaded with your manuscript files as a supplementary file. For further information on reporting guidelines, visit www.equator-network.org
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