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THORAX《胸腔》 (官网投稿)

简介
  • 期刊简称THORAX
  • 参考译名《胸腔》
  • 核心类别 SCIE(2023版), 高质量科技期刊(T1), 外文期刊,
  • IF影响因子
  • 自引率4.70%
  • 主要研究方向医学-RESPIRATORY SYSTEM 呼吸系统

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医学-RESPIRATORY SYSTEM 呼吸系统

THORAX《胸腔》(月刊). Thorax is one of the worlds leading respiratory medicine journals, publishing clinical and experimental research articles&nb...[显示全部]
征稿信息

万维提示:

1、投稿方式:在线投稿。

2、期刊网址:https://thorax.bmj.com/

3、投稿网址:https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/thorax

4、官网邮箱:thorax@bmj.com

5、期刊刊期:月刊,一年出版十二期。

2021524日星期一

                             

 

投稿须知【官网信息】

 

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Thorax is one of the world’s leading respiratory medicine journals, publishing clinical and experimental research articles on respiratory medicine, paediatrics, immunology, pharmacology, pathology, and surgery. Thorax seeks to publish significant advances in scientific understanding, which are likely to impact on clinical practice. This includes articles concerning basic and translational mechanisms with application to clinical material (cell and molecular biology, genetics, epidemiology, and immunology).

Thorax offers a fast-track review service for selected high-quality papers; authors who wish to benefit from this service should discuss this before submission with the Editors (thorax@bmj.com).

Editorial policy

Plan S compliance

Copyright and authors’ rights

Preprints

Article transfer service

Peer review

Tobacco industry funded work

Article processing charges

Data Sharing

ORCID

Cover letter

Submission guidelines

Statistics guidelines

Reporting guidelines

Editorial policy

Thorax adheres to the highest standards concerning its editorial policies on publication ethics, scientific misconduct, consent and peer review criteria. To view all BMJ Journal policies please refer to the BMJ Author Hub policies page.

Thorax will not consider for publication any study partly or wholly funded by the tobacco industry, see here and below for an explanation.

Plan S compliance

Thorax is a Plan S compliant Transformative Journal. Transformative Journals are one of the compliance routes offered by cOAlition S funders, such as Wellcome, WHO and UKRI. Find out more about Transformative Journals and Plan S compliance on our Author Hub.

Copyright and authors’ rights

Articles are published under an exclusive licence or non-exclusive licence for UK Crown employees or where BMJ has agreed CC BY applies. For US Federal Government officers or employees acting as part of their official duties, the terms are as stated in accordance with our licence terms. Authors or their employers retain copyright. Open access articles can be reused under the terms of the relevant Creative Commons licence to facilitate reuse of the content; please refer to the Thorax Author Licence for the applicable Creative Commons licences. More information on copyright and authors’ rights.

When publishing in Thorax, authors choose between three licence types – exclusive licence granted to BMJ, CC-BY-NC and CC-BY (Creative Commons open access licences require payment of an article processing charge). As an author you may wish to post your article in an institutional or subject repository, or on a scientific social sharing network. You may also link your published article to your preprint (if applicable). What you can do with your article, without seeking permission, depends on the licence you have chosen and the version of your article. Please refer to the BMJ author self archiving and permissions policies page for more information.

Preprints

Preprints foster openness, accessibility and collaboration by allowing authors to make their findings immediately available to the research community and receive feedback on an article before it is submitted to a journal for formal publication.

BMJ fully supports and encourages the archiving of preprints in any recognised, not-for-profit server such as medRxiv. BMJ does not consider the posting of an article in a dedicated preprint repository to be prior publication.

Preprints are reports of work that have not been peer-reviewed; Preprints should therefore not be used to guide clinical practice, health-related behaviour or health policy. For more information, please refer to our Preprint policy page.

Article transfer service

BMJ and the British Thoracic Society are committed to ensuring that good quality research is published. Our article transfer service helps authors find the best journal for their research while providing an easy and smooth publication process. As part of this service, once authors agree to transfer their manuscript all versions, supplementary files and peer reviewer comments are automatically transferred, without the need to resubmit or reformat.

Authors who submit to Thorax and whose work is rejected on the grounds of priority will be offered the option of transferring to BMJ Open Respiratory Research.

BMJ Open Respiratory Research is the open access companion journal to Thorax. It is indexed by Web of Science Core Collection: Emerging Sources Citation Index, MEDLINE, PubMed Central, Scopus, Embase (Excerpta Medica), DOAJ, Google Scholar, and covers all areas of respiratory medicine, critical care and sleep medicine. The journal publishes original articles considered by peer reviewers to be coherent and technically sound, ensuring that the latest research is disseminated rapidly to a global audience. Find out more about BMJ Open Respiratory Research.

Please note that the article transfer service does not guarantee acceptance but you should receive a quicker initial decision on your manuscript.

Contact the Product Owner of BMJ’s Article Transfer Service for more information or assistance.

Peer review

Articles submitted to Thorax are subject to peer review. The journal operates single blind peer review whereby the names of the reviewers are hidden from the author. When a paper has been submitted from the Editor or Associate Editors’ departments, they have no role in the reviewing or decision making process.  For more information on what to expect during the peer review process please refer to BMJ Author Hub – the peer review process.

BMJ requests that all reviewers adhere to a set of basic principles and standards during the peer-review process in research publication; these are based on the COPE Ethical Guidelines for Peer Reviewers. Please refer to our peer review terms and conditions policy page.

Reviewers are now able to share their activity by connecting their review to their ORCID account. As Thorax is a blind peer-reviewed Journal, only the Journal title will be uploaded into the reviewer’s ORCID record and the date the record was uploaded; there is no identification of the article’s title or authors. Records are uploaded once a final decision or revision has been made on the article. Please find more information about ORCID and BMJ’s policy on our Author Hub.

BMJ is committed to transparency. Every article we publish includes a description of its provenance (commissioned or not commissioned) and whether it was internally or externally peer reviewed.

Plagiarism is the appropriation of the language, ideas or thoughts of another without crediting their true source and representation of them as one’s own original work. BMJ is a member of CrossCheck by CrossRef and iThenticate. iThenticate is a plagiarism screening service that verifies the originality of content submitted before publication. BMJ runs manuscripts through iThenticate during the peer review process. Authors, researchers and freelancers can also use iThenticate to screen their work before submission by visiting www.ithenticate.com.

Tobacco industry-funded work

Thorax will not consider for publication papers reporting work funded, in whole or in part, by a tobacco company or tobacco industry organisation. Nor will the journal consider papers by authors who accept tobacco industry funding, including funding for research costs, for all or part of any author’s salary, or other forms of personal remuneration.

For further information, please read this editorial giving the reasoning behind the journal’s policy. Failure to declare competing interests at submission, or when an article is commissioned, can result in immediate rejection of the paper. If a competing interest comes to light after publication, Thorax will issue a formal correction to or retraction of the whole paper, as appropriate.

Article processing charges

At submission, authors can choose to have their article published open access under a Creative Commons licence for 2,500 GBP (excluding VAT). Publishing open access has multiple benefits including wider reach, faster impact and increased citation and usage. Authors can choose to publish their article in colour for the print edition for 400 GBP. All colour figures are published in colour online free of charge; authors who choose not to pay for print colour should ensure that their figures (graphs, charts, etc) can be understood in greyscale/black & white. There are no submission or page charges.

Find out if you are eligible for institutional funding

A number of institutions have open access agreements with BMJ which can either cover the whole cost of open access publishing for authors at participating institutions or can allow authors to receive a discount off the APC.

Visit BMJ’s open access agreements page to find out whether your institution is a member and what discounts you may be entitled to.

For more information on publishing open access with BMJ visit our Author Hub.

Data sharing

Thorax adheres to BMJ’s Tier 2 data policy. We strongly encourage that data generated by your research that supports your article be made available as soon as possible, wherever legally and ethically possible. We also require data from clinical trials to be made available upon reasonable request.

To adhere to ICMJE guidelines, we require that a data sharing plan must be included with trial registration for clinical trials that begin enrolling participants on or after 1st January 2019. Changes to the plan must be noted in the Data Availability Statement and updated in the registry record. All research articles must contain a Data Availability Statement. For more information and FAQs, please see BMJ’s full Data Sharing Policy page.

ORCID

BMJ has long supported the use of ORCID by integrating ORCID into our submission systems. Thorax mandates ORCID iDs for all submitting authors; this is published on the final article to promote discoverability and credit. Co-authors and reviewers are strongly encouraged to also connect their ScholarOne accounts to ORCID.

We are also working with ORCID to recognise the importance of the reviewer community. Reviewers are able to share their activity by connecting their review to their ORCID account to gain recognition for their contributions.

As Thorax is a blind peer-reviewed Journal, only the Journal title will be uploaded into the reviewer’s ORCID record and the date the record was uploaded; there is no identification of the article’s title or authors. Records are uploaded once a final decision or revision has been made on the article. Please find more information about BMJ’s ORCID policy on our Author Hub.

Cover letter

In the covering letter, authors should highlight whether the work has been presented at a conference and include the abstract reference if applicable. This will not affect the peer review process in any way but is helpful for the editorial team.

In addition a brief statement detailing the results and placing the data in clinical context is required.

Submission guidelines

Please review the below article type specifications including the required article lengths, illustrations, table limits and reference counts. The word count excludes the title page, abstract, tables, acknowledgements, contributions and references. Manuscripts should be as succinct as possible.

For further support when making your submission please refer to the resources available on the BMJ Author Hub. Here you will find information on writing and formatting your research through to the peer review process and promoting your paper. You may also wish to use the language editing and translation services provided by BMJ Author Services.

Original research

Protocol – clinical trials and systematic reviews

State of the art review

Brief communication

Editorial

Commentary

Controversies and challenges in respiratory medicine

Guidelines in context

Guideline highlights

eLetter

Case based discussion

Images in Thorax

Journal club

Pulmonary puzzle

Supplements

Statistics guidelines

All manuscripts elected for full peer review will be assessed by a statistical editor and their comments must be addressed in full.  Please pay close attention to the following when including your statistical analyses:

p values should be described in full if they are p>0.0001

Any experimental replicate with an n < 6 should undergo non-parametric statistical evaluation

Technical replicates should not undergo statistical evaluation

All studies evaluating multiple endpoints from a single experiment must be controlled for multiplicity.

Reporting guidelines

The guidelines listed below should be followed where appropriate. Please use these guidelines to structure your article. Completed applicable checklists, structured abstracts and flow diagrams should be uploaded with your submission; these will be published alongside the final version of your paper.

CONSORT Statement

For reporting of randomised controlled trials: please use the appropriate extension to the CONSORT statement, including the extension for writing abstracts

SRQR

For reporting qualitative research

COREQ

For reporting qualitative research

STARD

For reporting of diagnostic accuracy studies

STROBE

For reporting of observational studies in epidemiology

Checklist for cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional studies (combined)

Checklist for cohort studies

Checklist for case-control studies

Checklist for cross-sectional studies

PRISMA

For reporting of systematic reviews

PRISMA-P

For reporting of systematic review and meta-analysis protocols

PRISMA-ScR

For reporting of scoping reviews

MOOSE

For reporting of meta-analyses of observational studies

SPIRIT

For reporting protocols for RCTs

STREGA

For reporting of gene-disease association studies

TRIPOD

For reporting of studies developing, validating, or updating a prediction model, whether for diagnostic or prognostic purposes.

CHEERS

For reporting of health economic evaluations

The Equator Network (Enhancing the Quality and Transparency Of health Research) provides a comprehensive list of reporting guidelines.

Original research

Original research includes articles reporting original data.

Word count: up to 3,500: Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion

Title: maximum of 20 words

Structured abstract: up to 250

Figures: are not limited, but must be thoroughly justified

References: up to 40

Authors should also complete a short ‘Key Messages’ section after the abstract indicating the significance of this study by addressing each of the below headings with 1 sentence:

What is the key question?

What is the bottom line?

Why read on?

Thorax accepts various original research articles including:

Fundamental science – Statistical analyses must be carried out on all available data and not just on data from a representative experiment. Please see our statistics guidelines for more information. Statistics and error bars should only be shown for independent experiments and not for replicates within a single experiment. A more detailed discussion of error bars in experimental biology is described by Cumming et al., J. Cell Biol. 177:7–11. All animal studies must conform to the ARRIVE guidelines. Ensure that you include a scale bar in all photomicrographs.

Observational clinical studies -Retrospective observational studies which derive a scoring system (e.g. prognostic or diagnostic score) or evaluate a biomarker should have both a training and a validation cohort. Where these studies do not have a validation cohort they will be considered for publication as a brief communication only. For observational research, priority will be given to large prospective studies. Authors are instructed to follow ‘Control of Confounding and Reporting of Results in Causal Inference Studies. Guidance for Authors from Editors of Respiratory, Sleep, and Critical Care Journals’. Epidemiological studies must follow STROBE guidelines (or STREGA guidelines for genetic association studies).

Randomised controlled trials – The clinical trial protocol must have been publicly available before the trial commenced (eg on clinicaltrials.gov or ISRCTN). The trial must have appropriate ethical approval and must be reported according to the CONSORT guidelines. See also instructions for clinical trial protocol review by Thorax.

Systematic Reviews – Systematic reviews must be reported according to the PRISMA guidelines and the protocol for the review must have been publicly available before the review commenced (eg on the Cochrane Library or on PROSPERO). Systematic reviews of epidemiological studies should be reported in accordance with the MOOSE guidelines (Meta-analysis of Observational Studies in Epidemiology). There should be no financial support for the review from manufacturers of the drugs considered in the review, or their competitors.

Omic studies – In ‘omic studies, assessing large transcriptomic, proteomic or metabolomics datasets where multiple statistical comparisons have been made, correction for multiple hypothesis testing is an absolute requirement. For transcriptomic studies we would expect a threshold of twofold change in variables of interest in most circumstances. For mechanistic studies we require detailed validation experiments in cells or organisms that support the conclusions drawn from the ‘omic studies.

Protocol – clinical trials and systematic reviews

Protocols will be peer-reviewed – but not published – by Thorax. When the original research paper (clinical trial or systematic review) is subsequently submitted to Thorax, provided the study follows through the methodology of the already reviewed protocol, it will be fast-tracked through review and prioritised for publication; this should be noted in the cover letter. These papers will not be rejected on the outcomes of the study, but only if there are major flaws in either the conduct of the study (e.g. if it deviates from the reviewed protocol) or the writing of the paper. A more detailed description of the process follows.

Protocols that are favourably reviewed will be invited to transfer the protocol for publication in BMJ Open Respiratory Research (the online companion journal to Thorax, which publishes high quality respiratory and critical care research and offers rapid editorial and production times). Protocols and accompanying reviews are transferred directly without the need for resubmission. Authors should note that BMJ Open Respiratory Research does not guarantee publication and the editors reserve the right to conduct further review if necessary. BMJ Open Respiratory Research is an open access journal and the costs of publication are met by Article Processing Charge (APC). The APC for a protocol is GBP 1,000 / EUR 1,450 / USD 1,650 (+ VAT where applicable).

If you have any questions about the process please contact the journal editorial office: thorax@bmj.com.

State of the art review

State of the art reviews encompass important and topical subjects with a particular focus on recent advances and can detail the full translational nature of a disease. State of the art reviews are usually commissioned (invited by the editors) but the journal will consider unsolicited submissions. If you would like to propose a topic for a review please contact the editorial office: thorax@bmj.com. Please note that all reviews (whether invited or unsolicited) are subject to peer review and acceptance is not guaranteed.

Word count: up to 4,000

Structured abstract: up to 500

Tables/illustrations: no specific limit

References: up to 100

Brief communications

Brief communications are suited for single observation mechanistic studies, observation studies that do not delineate a mechanism and observational clinical studies, such as biomarker studies, which do not have a validation cohort (see observational clinical studies above).

Word count: up to 1,000

Title: maximum of 20 words

Unstructured abstract: 100 words

Tables/illustrations: 3

References: up to 10

Editorials

Editorials are commissioned by the Editors and aim to critically discuss and highlight important issues in papers published in Thorax; they will also identify areas where more information is needed. Authors should ensure they cite in the references the Thorax paper(s) which the editorial is designed to highlight using the below format:

Author AN. An excellent paper requiring an editorial. Thorax 2019 (epub ahead of print)”.

Word count: up to 1000

Structured abstract: not required

Tables/illustrations: up to 2

References: up to 8

Commentaries

A commentary is a short editorial which is commissioned to accompany a brief communication. The Editors solicit commentaries from early career researchers who are mentored by a more experienced colleague.

Word count: up to 500

Structured abstract: not required

Tables/illustrations: up to 1

References: up to 5

Controversies and challenges in respiratory medicine

Controversies and challenges in respiratory medicine’ articles are authored by key opinion leaders from the field and focus on areas where the data to support a current clinical practice are limited and areas where there is contrasting evidence of the best clinical practice. These articles are intended to stimulate debate in controversial and challenging clinical areas of respiratory medicine. They are usually commissioned (invited by the editors) but the journal will consider unsolicited submissions. If you would like to propose a topic please contact the editorial office: thorax@bmj.com. Please note that all ‘controversies and challenges’ articles (whether invited or  unsolicited) are subject to peer review and acceptance is not guaranteed.

Word count: up to 2500 words

Structured abstract: not required

Tables/Illustrations: up to 2

References: up to 5 (e.g. policy, guidelines, high impact randomised controlled trials)

Guidelines in context

Guidelines in context’ articles aim to compare clinical practice guidelines where there is more than one guideline for a single condition. Authors should aim to guide clinicians by highlighting common themes between guidelines and discussing why guideline recommendations might be divergent (e.g. differing healthcare systems of absence of high quality evidence). Authors should include a ‘Key Messages’ section, as described under original research.

These articles are usually commissioned but the Editors are open to suggestions around potential titles.

Word count: up to 2,000

Title: maximum of 20 words

Abstract: None

Tables/illustrations: 1 figure and 1 table

References: up to 20

Guideline highlights

Guideline highlights are commissioned articles from the authors of BTS guidelines published in the journal. They should be up to 1000 words and will consist of a summary of the full guidelines published in Thorax.

Case-based discussions

Case-based discussions raise interesting diagnostic or management issues that teach an important lesson. Patient consent must be obtained.

Word count: up to 1,500

Structured abstract: not required

Tables/illustrations: up to 1

References: no more than 5

We prefer the following formats for case-based discussions:

1. Junior doctor and experienced clinician dialogue. All participants should be authors. Pertinent aspects of the history, examination and investigations should be presented by the junior clinician in chronological order such that it mimics the actual clinical presentations. After every presentation the experienced clinician will discuss likely diagnosis and key missing information. This information will then be presented and the case should unravel naturally in much the same way it did in reality, ideally with one or two important take home messages.

2. A response to a referral note ‘Dear Chest Clinic’. These will clearly set out the diagnostic and management approach. Most will be commissioned. We are interested in expert views on optimum management of that case. We would like you to outline what you regard as best management in a reasonably sized and equipped District General Hospital. Don’t be afraid to ask for tests or treatments that are not readily available but do be prepared to justify clearly why you regard this test or treatment as essential.

3. Lesson of the month. A description of two or three cases from which an important lesson is learnt.

The quality of the image must be at least 600dpi and in TIFF, JPEG, GIF, Powerpoint or EPS format.

eLetter

eLetters (also referred to as rapid responses) are electronic responses to published Thorax articles online. To submit an eLetter use the ‘submit a response’ option in the content box menu seen in all abstract/extract, Full text and PDF views of a published article. All eLetters are subject to editorial approval and should not exceed 1,000 words. The author of the published article may be invited to reply to any responses received. The journal does not publish any other correspondence. eLetters are not subject to an article publishing charge and do not receive a DOI.

Images in Thorax

Images in Thorax may be radiological, pathological or both. Ensure that you include a scale bar in all images. Patient consent must be obtained.

Word count: up to 500

Tables/illustrations: up to 2

Author Limit: up to 5

References: up to 3

Journal club

For information on being an author for Journal Club please contact Dr Patrick Murphy at patrick.murphy@gstt.nhs.uk

Pulmonary puzzle

Pulmonary puzzles report unusual cases that make an educational point. Since the aim of these articles is to stimulate the reader to think about the case, the title should be ambiguous and not give away the final diagnosis immediately.

Pulmonary puzzles have two parts:

Introduction

a brief clinical introduction to a case (maximum 250 words) followed by an image and a question designed to stimulate the reader to think about what the image shows. The legend should not indicate the diagnosis but should simply describe the nature of the image .

Answer

appears later in the issue (maximum 250 words) outlines a brief description of the key diagnostic features of the image, the outcome, and a teaching point. Pulmonary puzzles will not include more than 5 references.

The quality of the image must be at least 300dpi and in TIFF, JPEG, GIF or EPS format. Videos are also welcome and should be in .mov, .avi, or .mpeg format.

Supplements

BMJ is willing to consider publishing supplements to regular journal issues. Supplement proposals may be made at the request of:

The journal editor, an editorial board member or a learned society may wish to organise a meeting, sponsorship may be sought and the proceedings published as a supplement.

The journal editor, editorial board member or learned society may wish to commission a supplement on a particular theme or topic. Again, sponsorship may be sought.

BMJ itself may have proposals for supplements where sponsorship may be necessary.

A sponsoring organisation, often a pharmaceutical company or a charitable foundation, that wishes to arrange a meeting, the proceedings of which will be published as a supplement.

In all cases, it is vital that the journal’s integrity, independence and academic reputation is not compromised in any way.

For further information on criteria that must be fulfilled, download the supplements guidelines.

When contacting us regarding a potential supplement, please include as much of the information below as possible.

Journal in which you would like the supplement published

Title of supplement and/or meeting on which it is based

Date of meeting on which it is based

Proposed table of contents with provisional article titles and proposed authors

An indication of whether authors have agreed to participate

Sponsor information including any relevant deadlines

An indication of the expected length of each paper Guest Editor proposals if appropriate


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