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Childhood Obesity《儿童肥胖症》 (官网投稿)

简介
  • 期刊简称CHILD OBES
  • 参考译名《儿童肥胖症》
  • 核心类别 SCIE(2023版), 外文期刊,
  • IF影响因子
  • 自引率4.90%
  • 主要研究方向医学-PEDIATRICS 儿科

主要研究方向:

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医学-PEDIATRICS 儿科

Childhood Obesity《儿童肥胖症》(一年8期). Childhood Obesity is the only peer-reviewed journal that delivers actionable, real-world obesity prevention and&n...[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://home.liebertpub.com/publications/childhood-obesity/384/overview

3、投稿网址:

https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/childhoodobesity

4、官网邮箱:chi_eo@liebertpub.com

5、期刊刊期:一年出版8期。

202164日星期五

                             

 

投稿须知【官网信息】

 

Information For Authors

Submitting Your Manuscript

Childhood Obesity delivers action-oriented content addressing prevention and management strategies during the formative years of childhood and adolescence. 

ORCID IDs

The submitting author is required to complete the submission using an ORCID identifier. Please visit the ORCID website for more information, or to register.  You must have an account in ScholarOne for Childhood Obesity before logging in with an ORCID identifier.

Use of English Language

All submissions must be in English. Appropriate use of English is a requirement for review and publication in Childhood Obesity. To support non-native speakers, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., has partnered with Editage to provide language editing and translation services for a fee prior to official submission. To learn more about the services, please visit the Liebert Author Services website.  Please note that employing the use of such services is not mandatory and using it, or any other language editing service, does not guarantee the acceptance of any paper. All submissions are subject to peer review.

Manuscript Submission Site

Create an Account in ScholarOne

If you do not already have an account in ScholarOne for Childhood Obesity, you will need to create one.  Once you create your account, you may log in to the system to begin your submission.  Each listed author on a submission must either have an account, or have one created, in the submission system.

CLICK HERE TO SUBMIT YOUR MANUSCRIPT

See JOURNAL STANDARDS AND BEST PRACTICES STATEMENT

Check the Journal’s PEER REVIEW POLICIES

Manuscript Preparation

Determining Authorship

(See AUTHORSHIP DEFINITION AND RESPONSIBILITIES

All authors, including the co-authors, should be responsible for a significant part of the manuscript. All authors and co-authors should have taken part in writing the manuscript, reviewing it, and revising its intellectual and technical content. Any author whose name appears on a manuscript assumes responsibility and accountability for the results.

Submission Process

CLICK HERE FOR ARTICLE TYPES AND WORD LIMITS

All Original submissions must contain:

An Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval (or waiver) statement in the Methods section

Acknowledgments section (if applicable) after the Conclusion of the manuscript, followed by

An Author Contribution statement for each listed author, followed by

An Author Disclosure Statement for each author listed on a submission, even if there are no conflicts to disclose, followed by,

Funding statement(s), even if there is no funding information to declare.

See IRB APPROVALS, PATIENT CONSENT, & ETHICAL TREATMENT OF ANIMALS

See AUTHOR CONFIRMATION AND DISCLOSURE STATEMENTS

See FUNDING INFORMATION: COMPLIANCE AND STATEMENTS

Human Subjects: Patient Consent/Release

If applicable, it is incumbent upon the author(s) to obtain patient release statements of permission to reproduce any identifiable images of patients. The Journal does not provide a generic patient release form. Any identifying information should not be published in descriptions or photographs unless the information is essential for scientific purposes and the patient (or parent/guardian) gives written informed consent for publication. Informed consent for this purpose requires that an identifiable patient be shown the manuscript to be submitted. Authors should disclose to these patients whether any potential identifiable material might be available via the Internet as well as in print after publication. Nonessential identifying details should be omitted. Informed consent should be obtained if there is any doubt that anonymity can be maintained. For example, masking the eye region in photographs of patients is inadequate protection of anonymity. If identifying characteristics are de-identified, the manuscript should contain assurances/statements that such changes do not distort scientific meaning.

In keeping with patients' rights of privacy, the Journal does not require the submission of patient consent forms, but instead requires the author(s) to retain and archive all patient consent documentation. Upon submission of a manuscript for review, the authors must make a statement in a cover letter to the Editor/Journal which attests that they have received and archived written patient consent.

Person-first language

Childhood Obesity mandates that authors use person-first language throughout their publications. Person-first language emphasizes the individual first and foremost, and their condition, disease, or situation second. With regard to children, adolescents, and adults with overweight or obesity, it is critically important to avoid using "overweight" or "obese" as an adjective or as a way to describe a person or group of people, as this can contribute to weight bias, discrimination, and stigma. For example, authors should use the terms "child with obesity" or "adolescent with overweight" instead of "obese child" or "overweight adolescent." Other words, phrases, or images should be reviewed carefully for potentially stigmatizing or biased meanings. Manuscripts will not be considered for publication without person-first language, or if stigmatizing or biased text or images are used.

All manuscripts must be prepared in accordance with the Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing, and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals (ICMJE Recommendations).

When submitting your manuscript for peer review, be prepared to:

Enter the full title of the manuscript

Enter the full names and institutional affiliations of ALL listed authors

Enter ALL listed authors' institutional email addresses

Identify the corresponding author

Enter a running (abbreviated) title of no more than 50 characters (including spaces).

Enter 3–6 keywords or phrases to assist in the selection of skilled reviewers in the field for the purposes of peer review.

Provide a structured abstract of no more than 250 words

Provide the names and email addresses of at least five potential preferred reviewers familiar with the field. Please make sure preferred reviewers are not from your university or institution or with whom you have collaborated.  Anyone whom the author does not want to be considered should also be named as a non-preferred reviewer. Ultimate reviewer selection is at the Editor’s discretion.

Confirm that the material has not been published or submitted for publication elsewhere.

Create an Effective Title

Manuscript titles should be brief, contain key terms, and clearly identify the purpose

of the work conducted

Manuscript titles should not exceed 15 -18 words. Exceptions can be made with the Editor’s approval

Manuscript titles should be direct and to the point. Remember that the journal has a global readership, so clear and concise non-vernacular language is most effective

Avoid the use of specific locations in the title

Do not use proprietary/trademarked names in the title

Do not use acronyms in the title unless they are universally recognized and accepted

NOTE: The title page of your submission must be included as part of your main text document (not as a separate file).

File Naming

All file names should be in English and contain only alphanumeric characters.  Do not include spaces, symbols, special characters, dashes, dots, or underscores.  Label each file with the first author's last name, followed by the content of the file (i.e.: SmithText; SmithTables; SmithFigureLegends; SmithFig1, etc.)

Important:  Please upload individual files of all manuscript material as described herein — please do NOT upload a combined PDF file containing all material in your submission. 

Preparation of Manuscript

Prepare text of manuscripts, figure legends, and tables in Microsoft Word, double spaced. The order of elements in each manuscript should be:

Title page (with full manuscript title, all contributing authors’ names, academic degrees, their complete affiliations and addresses, and institutional email addresses, a short running title, a denotation of the corresponding author, and a list of 3-6 keywords)

Abstract

Main text (do not embed figures or tables)

Conclusion (as a separate paragraph, not as part of the Discussion section)

Acknowledgments (if applicable)

Authorship confirmation statement (see below)

Author(s’) disclosure statement(s) (see below)

Funding statement (see below)

References

Figure legends

Tables

Supplemental Information (if applicable; NOTE: Supplemental Information will not be copyedited or typeset; it will be posted online as supplied.)

Note: The keywords are search terms that will aid in the discoverability of the article in indexing services and search engines. These terms may or may not be different from the terms you selected for the peer review process and areas of expertise. You will be asked to retype these search terms in the submission form when uploading your manuscript. These keywords will be included in the published article.  If the search terms entered do not match the manuscript, the manuscript will serve as the default.

Abstract

Abstracts of original articles should be structured and contain four paragraphs labeled as: Background, Methods, Results, and Conclusions.  Although Review articles require an abstract, it does not need to be structured.

Manuscript Text

Maximum word count for original articles should not exceed 3,000 words.  In general, the text should be organized under the headings: Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, and Conclusions. Use only standard abbreviations, which can be found in the AMA’s Manual of Style for Authors and Editors, 10th edition or the Council of Science Editors (CSE) Style Manual, 8th edition. At first usage, spell out terms and provide abbreviations in parentheses. Thereafter, use only the abbreviations. It is not necessary to spell out standard units of measure. Use generic names for drugs if possible. If you wish to use a proprietary drug name the first time it appears, use the generic name followed by the proprietary name, manufacturer, and location in parentheses.

References 

References must be prepared in Word, double spaced, and numbered consecutively as they are cited in the text (using superscript numbers).  Include the reference section as part of the main text file, not as a separate file. References appearing for the first time in tables and figures must be numbered in sequence with those cited in the text where the table or figure is mentioned. Use journal abbreviations as provided by PubMed/Medline. List all authors when there are four or fewer. When there are more than four authors, list the first three, followed by et al.

If references to personal communications or unpublished data are used, they are not to be in the list of references. They should be referred to in the text in parentheses: (AB Jones, personal communication). Written permission must be obtained from the author of any unpublished material and should accompany the manuscript. Include among the references any articles that have been accepted but have not yet published; identify the name of publication and add "In Press." If the reference has been published online, provide the DOI number in place of the page range.

Authors are responsible for the accuracy and completeness of the references and for their correct text citation.

Sample style for references:

    Journal article:

Liberali R, Kupek E, de Assis MAA. Dietary patterns and childhood obesity risk: A systematic review. Child Obes 2020;16:70-85. 

    Book:

Hayes AF. Introduction to Mediation, Moderation, and Conditional Process Analysis: A Regression-Based Approach. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Guilford Press; 2017.

    Chapter in a book:     

de Silva-Sanigorski AM, Economos C. Evidence of multi-setting approaches for obesity prevention: Translation to best practice. In: Waters E, Swinburn BA, Seidell JC, Uauy R, eds. Preventing Childhood Obesity: Evidence Policy and Practice. West Sussex, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.; 2010:57-63.

Figure Legends

Figure legends should be uploaded as a separate Word file and double spaced. In the legend, provide explanations for any abbreviations, arrows, etc. that appear in the figure. If the figure is taken from a copyrighted publication, permission must be secured, appropriate credit must be given in the legend, and a corresponding reference must appear in the reference section.

Tables

All tables should be prepared in one single Word file. Provide a title for each table. Use Arabic numerals to number tables. Cite tables in sequence in the text. Explain abbreviations used in the body of the table in footnotes. Each table must stand alone, i.e., contain all necessary information within the table or in table footnotes, and the table itself must be understood independently of the text. Information that appears in the text should not be repeated in the table, and tables should not contain data that can be given in the text in one or two sentences. If the table is taken from a copyrighted publication, permission must be secured, appropriate credit must be given in the legend, and a corresponding reference must appear in the reference section.

Figures

Submission of high resolution .TIFF or .EPS figure files is strongly recommended.

Figures should not be embedded within the manuscript file.

Cite figures consecutively in text within parentheses.

A legend should be supplied for each figure and all legends numbered consecutively.

Images should not show the name of a patient or a manufacturer. 

Do not include any illustrations as part of your text file.

Correspondence Address

Following the references, provide the name and complete affiliation and institutional email address of the person to whom correspondence should be sent.

Manuscript Revisions

To upload a revision of a manuscript, the submitting author should log in to their Author Center at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/childhoodobesity and click on “Revised Manuscripts in Draft.”  All revised submissions will be required to meet all formatting conditions described herein.  Submissions that do not satisfy these requirements will be un-submitted and returned to the submitting author for proper configuration.

Letters to the Editor

Childhood Obesity will consider Letters to the Editor commenting on the scientific content of an article published in the Journal. Letters should not exceed 500 words of text and 5 references. Letters submitted for publication must be original and must not be submitted to any other publication simultaneously.

For questions regarding manuscript submissions, contact our Author Services Division.


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