Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine
Instructions for Authors
All scientists interested in the area of agricultural and environmental medicine are cordially invited to contribute; articles and brief communications presenting original scientific results and reports of clinical cases may be submitted. Brief communications should contain new scientific information of primary importance. If accepted, they will be published as soon as possible. Reviews presenting the state of the art in particular subjects will be requested by the editors on the basis of individual commitment. Book reviews, news of international meetings and activities, letters to the editors and editorial notes will be also published at the editors’ discretion.
The journal “Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine” using the Open Access* model publishes: original and review articles, letters to the editors, and other materials. All original articles, review articles and case reports are reviewed. Articles submitted to AAEM are subject to the publication process in accordance with Regulations (Regulations for the journal Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine published by Witold Chodźko Institute of Rural Health , Annex No. 1).
*„Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine” is an open access journal, which means that the journal offers free and immediate access to its contents to promote the unrestricted global exchange of knowledge. The free availability means that any users are permitted to "read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose, without financial, legal, or technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to the internet itself. The only constraint on reproduction and distribution, and the only role for copyright in this domain, should be to give authors control over the integrity of their work and the right to be properly acknowledged and cited" (Budapest Open Access Initiative, https://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org/read).
AAEM endorses ORCID ( https://orcid.org/about/what-is-orcid/mission) and requires that all authors provide an ORCID iD when submitting a manuscript. We encourage coauthors to register and use their ORCID as well.
The following problem subjects are addressed in AAEM: biological, physical and chemical health hazards, prevention of occupational diseases, work-related accidents and injuries, state of the health of rural communities.
1. Original articles, short reports, review articles and case reports should be submitted to the Editors exclusively by electronic mail. Please use the editorial panel available on the website: www.aaem.pl passing to the bookmark Submit your paper, and follow further instructions. The remaining types of submissions, i.e. letters to editors, conference reports and book reviews should be sent to the address: aaem.edit@gmail.com.
2. Original articles must contain the following: Introduction and objective, material and methods, results, discussion, conclusions, and references. Abstracts of original articles should consist of 1400-1800 characters, including spaces, and divided into: introduction and objective, materials and methods, results, conclusions.
3. Review articles must contain: introduction and objective, review methods (precisely described criteria of selection and exclusion of source publications indicating their limitations and/or qualities, providing the methods of literature search – electronic databases, review of journals), description of the state of knowledge, summary, and references. Abstracts of review articles should consist of 1400-1800 characters, including spaces, and divided into: introduction and objective, review methods, abbreviated description of the state of knowledge, summary. It is advisable to include most important data in tables and figures – the information contained there should not be repeated in the text.
4. Original and review articles must contain 3 - 10 key words selected with consideration of the terms contained in ‘Medical Subject Headings’ MeSH.
5 . Abstracts of short communication should consist of 800-1000 characters, including spaces. Short communication should not exceed 10,000 characters including spaces, but excluding abstract and references (limited to a necesarry minimum).
6. List of references:
The list of references is the responsibility of the author. References should be quoted in square brackets in order of citation.References must be in accordance with the principles established by the ‘Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals’ (www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/uniform_requirements.html), also referred to as the “AMA” style.
The list of references must be sent directly in the editorial system.
Authors should focus on recent papers and papers older than eight years should not be included except for an overriding purpose (min. 75%).
Each reference should contain: surnames and first letters of authors’ names, title of the article, abbreviated title of the journal, year of publication, volume number, issue number, numbers of the first and last pages. If there are more than three authors, after the third name, ‘et al.’ should be written.
Abbreviated titles of journals indexed on the Medline (PubMed) database should be quoted according to the NLM Catalogue (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nlmcatalog), and the titles of the remaining journals according to the version provided by the editors of individual journals.
If the article has a DOI (Digital Object Identifier) number, please enter it at the end of the bibliographic record as a full link, e.g. https://doi.org/10.26444/aaem/94675.
The website references should contain the date of downloading or reviewing of the file in brackets after the URL address (Uniform Resource Locator). Punctuation must be maintained precisely according to the examples of references presented below:
Article in a journal
Wójcik-Fatla A, Sroka J, Zając V, et al. Potential sources of infection with selected zoonotic agents in the veterinary work environment – pilot studies. Ann Agric Environ Med. 2020;27(1):146-150. https://doi.org/10.26444/aaem/115363.
Books and monographs
Ringsven MK, Bond D. Gerontology and leadership skills for nurses. 2nd ed. Albany (NY) Publishers, 1996.
Section in a book
Sullivan JB Jr, Gonzales M, Krieger GR, et al. Health-related hazards of agriculture. In: Sullivan JB Jr, Krieger GR, editors. Hazardous Materials Toxicology. Clinical Principles of Environmental Health, Baltimore; 1992. p. 642-666.
Philips SJ, Whisnant JP. Hypertension and stroke. In: Laragh JH, Brenner BM, editors. Hypertension: pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management. 2nd ed. New York: Raven Press; 1995. p. 465-78.
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