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ANESTHESIA & ANALGESIA(或:ANESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA)《麻醉和镇痛》投稿须知(官网信息)

2021/7/20 16:30:28 来源:官网信息 阅读:693 发布者:
编者按:以下信息,由万维书刊网根据期刊官网信息整理发布!仅供投稿参考!

Instructions for Authors

Anesthesia & Analgesia

The Gold Standard in Anesthesiology

We greatly appreciate your interest in submitting your manuscript to Anesthesia & Analgesia. Our goal is to provide authors with a thorough yet timely review of their submissions. All initial decisions should be completed within 6 weeks, except for Review Articles and Special Articles, which may take up to 8 weeks. Authors will be updated as to the status of their manuscript via Editorial Manager.

Notice: The Instructions for Authors for Anesthesia & Analgesia have been further revised. New submissions should be prepared according to the Instructions that follow. Failure to do so may result in your submission being returned without review.

This now current Version 3.6 of these Instructions for Authors replaces the earlier Version 3.5.

As of July 1, 2019, Anesthesia & Analgesia is not receiving or considering new Brief Report manuscript submissions.

Brief Report manuscripts that have been submitted prior to July 1, 2019 will undergo a complete review and final decision by Anesthesia & Analgesia. Previously accepted Brief Report manuscripts will still be published by Anesthesia & Analgesia.

Authors seeking to submit to A&A Practice (formerly A&A Case Reports) can find its separate A&A Practice Instructions for Authors and submit their papers through the A&A Practice Editorial Manager Submission Site.

As of January 1, 2018, all Echo Rounds and Echo Didactics articles are published online only in A&A Practice. Please refer to these separate A&A Practice Instructions for Authors for Echo Rounds and Echo Didactics submissions.

A&A Practice remains fully editorially aligned and operationally integrated yet distinct from Anesthesia & Analgesia.

Mission and Scope

Anesthesia & Analgesia exists for the benefit of patients under the care of health care professionals engaged in the disciplines broadly related to anesthesiology, perioperative medicine, critical care medicine, and pain medicine. The Journal furthers the care of these patients by reporting the fundamental advances in the science of these clinical disciplines and by documenting the clinical, laboratory, and administrative advances that guide therapy. Anesthesia & Analgesia seeks a balance between definitive clinical and management investigations and outstanding basic scientific reports. The Journal welcomes original manuscripts containing rigorous design and analysis, even if unusual in their approach.

Authors are encouraged to read this editorial, which describes some of the previous changes to the editorial philosophy of Anesthesia & Analgesia: Pittet JF, Vetter TR. Continuing the Terra Firma and Establishing a New EQUATOR for Anesthesia & Analgesia. Anesth Analg. 2016;123(1):8-9.

Authors are strongly encouraged to adhere to the fundamentals of English grammar, syntax, punctuation, and composition.

Authors are encouraged to read this excellent synopsis on the fundamentals of writing a research report: Sessler DI, Shafer S. Writing Research Reports. Anesthesia & Analgesia. 2018;126(1):330-337.

If a paper is poorly written and thus difficult to understand, it will likely not receive as favorable a review, despite presenting strong science and/or novel information. If indicated, please consider using a Language Editing Service (see below) to address this issue before your initial submission.

Anesthesia & Analgesia Instructions for Authors

Anesthesia & Analgesia has specific Instructions for Authors for submitting articles, which are found below. We strongly encourage all authors to read these instructions completely and carefully, and to prepare their manuscripts in accordance with these instructions.

Articles that are not submitted in accordance with our instructions may be returned for revision prior to peer-review or rejected outright.

Brevity is crucial for a well-written and effective scholarly article. Particular attention should thus be paid to the listed word count, reference count, and table/figure limits for each article type, both for an initial submission and any subsequent revisions.

The word count, reference count, and table/figure limits will be strictly enforced, resulting in a manuscript being returned to the author(s) for revision prior to any initial or a subsequent peer-review.

Occasionally, authors will be asked by the Journal Editorial Board to resubmit their work as a different article type. If so, this subsequent manuscript will be handled as an entirely new submission, with a corresponding new assigned manuscript number.

Any changes (additions or deletions) of authors will need to be justified and clearly communicated. See below, Section 8.A. Role of Authors and Contributors.

Please note that a Glossary of Terms is now required for all submissions to A&A Practice (except Letter to the Editor). See below, Section 6.

Questions?

If you have a question specifically for the Editor-in-Chief, Dr. Jean-Francois Pittet, please email him at jpittet@iars.org, or contact the Deputy Editor-in-Chief, Dr. Thomas Vetter at thomas.vetter@austin.utexas.edu

If you have questions about these submission instructions, or the Journal peer review process in general, please contact the Editorial Office via editor@anesthesia-analgesia.org

Manuscripts may only be submitted via the Editorial Manager online submission system:

Submit your manuscript to Anesthesia & Analgesia here.

Submit your manuscript to A&A Practice here.

If you are new to our journal, our Visual User Guide for Authors will help you step-by-step to create an author account and to submit your new manuscript via Editorial Manager.

If you are submitting a revised manuscript, our User Guide for Revisions will help you step-by-step to submit your revised manuscript via Editorial Manager.

Download a PDF version of the full Instructions for Authors of Anesthesia & Analgesia

INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUTHORS

Section 1: Anesthesia & Analgesia Article Types

Section 2: Articles at a Glance

Section 3: Standardized Study Reporting Requirements

Section 4: Standards for Statistical Methods and Statistical Reporting

Section 5: Digital Copyright Transfer Agreement

Section 6: Open Access Option for Publication

Section 7: Manuscript Preparation Requirements

Section 8: Editorial, Ethical and Legal Requirements

Section 9: Common Reasons Your Submission is Returned Without Review

SECTION 1: ANESTHESIA & ANALGESIA ARTICLE TYPES (Back to Contents): Each is described in detail below.

Original Clinical, Health Services or Education Research Report

Original Laboratory Research Report

Narrative Review Article

Systematic Review Articles

Meta-Analysis

Editorial

The Open Mind

The Human Experience

Special Article

Letter to the Editor

Book and Multimedia Reviews

Meeting Report

DESCRIPTIONS OF SPECIFIC ARTICLE TYPES

Anesthesia & Analgesia

Original Clinical, Health Services, or Educational Research Report (Back to Top)

An Original Clinical, Health Services, or Educational Research Report describes an investigation that focuses on the clinical practice of anesthesiology, perioperative medicine, critical care medicine, or pain medicine.

Original Clinical, Health Services, or Educational Research Reports span the spectrum of patient-reported outcomes, clinical effectiveness, quality and performance improvement, patient safety, health services delivery, dissemination and implementation science, health policy, healthcare economics, population health, and education.

An Original Clinical, Health Services, or Education Research Report includes a Title Page and structured Abstract of no more than 400 words.

A “Key Points” summary is also provided, which describes the Question, Findings, and Meaning, each composed of one sentence.

These Reports are divided into four sections: Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion.

The Introduction section should be focused and contain no more than 400 words. The Introduction succinctly describes, in a series of short paragraphs, the significance of the topic, pertinent background, rationale for the study, a priori study aims or objectives, and primary study hypothesis, and if appropriate, secondary study hypothesis.

The Discussion section should also be focused and contain no more than 1,000 words. The Discussion succinctly interprets the primary findings of the study and how they relate to previous published findings. The limitations of the present study are clearly stated. If applicable, future, related research opportunities are briefly proposed.

An Original Clinical, Health Services, or Education Research Report ranges in total length from 1,500 to 4,000 words (not counting the Abstract and references), with no more than 30-40 references and 4-6 tables and/or figures. Online supplemental material can be provided when appropriate.

Study Reporting Requirement (EQUATOR)

Instructions for Manuscript preparation

Instructions for Figure preparation

Instructions for Table preparation

Instructions for Supplemental Material

Original Laboratory Research Report (Back to Top)

An Original Laboratory Research Report describes an investigation that focuses on an aspect of basic science related to anesthesiology, perioperative medicine, critical care medicine, or pain medicine.

Original Laboratory Research Reports span the spectrum of cell biology, immunology, neurobiology, biochemistry, pharmacology, microbiology, and genetics.

An Original Laboratory Research Report includes a Title Page and structured Abstract of no more than 400 words.

A “Key Points” summary is also provided, which describes the Question, Findings, and Meaning, each composed of one sentence.

These Reports are divided into four sections: Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion.

The Introduction section should be focused and contain no more than 400 words. The Introduction succinctly describes, in a series of short paragraphs, the significance of the topic, pertinent background, rationale for the study, a priori study aims or objectives, and primary study hypothesis, and if appropriate, secondary study hypothesis.

The Discussion section should also be focused and contain no more than 1,000 words. The Discussion succinctly interprets the primary findings of the study and how they relate to previous published findings. The limitations of the present study are clearly stated. If applicable, future, related research opportunities are briefly proposed.

An Original Laboratory Research Report ranges in total length from 1,500 to 4,000 words (not counting the Abstract and references), with no more than 30-40 references and 4-6 tables and/or figures. Online supplemental material can be provided when appropriate.

Study Reporting Requirement (EQUATOR)

Instructions for Manuscript preparation

Instructions for Figure preparation

Instructions for Table preparation

Instructions for Supplemental Material

Narrative and Systematic Review Articles (Back to Top)

A Narrative Review Article or Systematic Review Article synthesizes previously published material into an integrated presentation of the current understanding of a topic.

A Narrative Review can be either focused or comprehensive, based on its topic and scope.

A Narrative Review Article should describe aspects of a topic about which scientific and evidence-based consensus exists, as well as aspects that remain controversial and are thus topics for ongoing and future research.

A duly noted and entitled Consensus Practice Guideline is considered a specific type of a focused Narrative Review.

A duly noted and entitled Statistical Grand Rounds is another specific type of a focused Narrative Review of the conventional or novel application of contemporary quantitative sciences (i.e., statistics, epidemiology, or database management) to issues of concern to anesthesia, critical care or pain researchers. Here the inclusion of programing code and/or illustrative datasets as online supplemental material is encouraged.

For a Systematic Review, a formal strategy to search and to critically evaluate the medical literature should be applied and well-described. Such explicit methods are used in a Systematic Review to minimize bias in its content and findings.

All Review Articles include a Title Page and an unstructured Abstract with no more than 400 words.

The Introduction section should be focused and contain no more than 400 words.

The Discussion section should also be focused and contain no more than 1,000 words.

A Review Article ranges in total length from 1,500 to 5,000 words (not counting the Abstract and references), with up to 150 references and 4-6 tables and/or figures. Online supplemental material can be provided when appropriate.

Exceptions to these word count, reference count, and table/figure limits may be granted at the discretion of the Journal Editorial Board for a Consensus Practice Guideline manuscript.

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