All authors interested in publishing their research work in the British Journal of Translational Global Health (BJoTGH) will need to submit their manuscripts for publication through a web-based manuscript tracking system (MTS). The authors can submit new manuscripts, revise their existing manuscripts, and upload other required documents on the MTS. MTS also provides for tracking the status of the manuscripts, that are already submitted. This system helps the editorial office to communicate with the editors, associate editors, and reviewers and thus manage the peer review process. The same system is used for communication with authors. Please go to the Manuscript tracker and register yourself (if first time user) to submit the manuscripts. Manuscripts are received with the understanding that they contain original data that are not previously published or are being considered for publication elsewhere. In case of any queries or additional information, you can write an e-mail to the Editor-in-Chief of the journal at editor@BJoTGH.com
The submitted manuscripts are duly acknowledged. The article once submitted will undergo a plagiarism check. An initial check is conducted to ensure that all author instructions are complied with and the guidelines for submission are followed. All communications regarding the manuscript with the Journal should be handled by one of the authors (assigned as ‘corresponding author’). The Managing editor runs the initial check, processes the manuscript for all the required components, and approves for moving to the next level. The manuscript may be returned to the author for corrections, if required, to conform to the journal instructions.
Once, the article passes the initial check, it will undergo editorial review. Here, the manuscript is checked for suitability for the core readers of the British Journal of Translational Global Health (BJoTGH) by the Editor-in-Chief. If it is found suitable, it is assigned to one of the Editorial Board Members. The editorial review which includes the initial assessment and assignment for review will take 7 – 10 working days. Manuscripts not found suitable will not be sent out for review and will be immediately rejected, and authors informed.
Once the manuscript passes the editorial review, it will then be sent for external peer review. Manuscripts are sent to a minimum of two independent expert reviewers to assess the scientific quality of the manuscript. All manuscripts undergo a double-blinded review process. The Editor-in-Chief makes a final recommendation (revise/ accept/ reject) on the manuscript based on the suggestions and comments of the reviewers. The authors will be informed of the first decision in 8 – 10 weeks from the date of submission. If a manuscript must be revised, the author(s) are asked to give a detailed response to the reviewers' suggestions and submit the revised manuscript for further review. Decisions on the revised manuscripts will be conveyed within 4 weeks from the date of re-submission. This process is repeated till the authors, reviewers, and editors are satisfied with the manuscript. The authors can track the progress of the manuscript through https://www.britishjournalglobalhealth.co.uk/manuscriptTrack/BJOTGH.
The manuscript will be assessed for significance, originality, clarity, and relevance to the journal's scope and content, Studies that challenge previously published research or have negative results despite having sufficient power will also be considered. Manuscripts received from Editorial Board members will be screened by the Editor in Chief and sent to external peer reviewers. Manuscripts authored by the Editor in Chief will be handled by the other editorial board members, and the final decision will be made by the Associate Editor/ Editor. The editorial board members who are authors will be excluded from publication decisions. The journal's standard procedures are followed for manuscripts received from the members of sponsoring organization/ institution wherein the members linked with the same institution as the author (s) are excluded from the review and editorial decisions.
Genuine appeals to editor decisions are welcome. The authors can appeal if they have a genuine cause to believe that the editorial board has wrongly rejected the paper. If the authors wish to appeal against the editor’s decision, they should email the editorial office editor@jaypeebrothers.com / editor@BJoTGH.com explaining in detail the basis for the appeal with evidence or new information. The editorial office will acknowledge the appeals and conduct an unbiased investigation. Within 6 to 8 weeks, appeals will be processed, and the decision will be conveyed to the authors. Till the time of decision, the paper should not be submitted to other journals. The Editor-in-Chief of the journal makes the final decision. Second appeals will not be considered.
The full text of all articles published in the BJoTGH is immediately provided in open access and available to the public. We are committed to keeping abstracts freely available.
To support this, we accept article processing charges of 150 pounds (plus VAT where applicable).
This APC may be waived for authors from developing countries who do not have funds to cover the cost. Editorial consideration and decisions are not in any way related to the ability of authors to pay the APC, as the negotiation is handled by an administrative staff of the journal. Please note that the BJoTGH has NO article submission charges.
The British Journal of Global Health is a Tri-annually publication.
Under Creative Commons, the Authors retain ownership of the copyright for their content. The authors assign exclusive commercial re-use rights of the article to the Publisher.
All open-access articles published are distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC 4.0 license (Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial 4.0 International Public License as currently displayed at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/legalcode) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, for non-commercial purposes, provided the original work is properly cited.
Authors have to mandatorily submit the Open Access License Agreement Form when submitting the manuscript.
Articles published under this arrangement are made freely available online upon publication without subscription barriers to access. Users of such published articles are entitled to use, reproduce, disseminate, or display these articles for personal, research, and educational use provided that:
The journal follows the World Association of Medical Editors' (WAME’s) definition of plagiarism: “Plagiarism is the use of others' published and unpublished ideas or words (or other intellectual property) without attribution or permission and presenting them as new and original rather than derived from an existing source. The intent and effect of plagiarism is to mislead the reader as to the contributions of the plagiarizer. This applies whether the ideas or words are taken from abstracts, research grant applications, Institutional Review Board applications, or unpublished or published manuscripts in any publication format (print or electronic)”.
The journal follows a strict anti-plagiarism policy. The authors are advised not to indulge in any form of plagiarism. The journal investigates allegations of plagiarism or the unauthorized use of published content to uphold the rights of our authors. We also work to guard the journal's reputation against unethical practices.
The submitted article is checked with duplication-checking software. If the content is found to be plagiarised, the Editor and the journal committee will take appropriate action as directed by the guidelines put forth by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). If plagiarism is detected after publication, the Journal will initiate an investigation. If plagiarism is established, the Journal reserves the right to act including, but not limited to notifying the authors’ institution and funding bodies, retracting the plagiarised article, or taking appropriate legal action. To report plagiarism, contact the journal office at editor@jaypeebrothers.com. For further information about the policy on publication malpractice or research misconduct, refer to the policy pagehttps://www.britishjournalglobalhealth.co.uk/journal/BJOTGH/page/policy.
The journal follows the recommendations of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE).
As per the CARE reporting guidelines, the patient or the legal guardian must provide written informed consent for the inclusion of their clinical and imaging details in the manuscript for the purpose of publication. The submitted manuscript needs to contain a statement that informed consent was obtained from the patient for the purpose of publication.
Click to download the Patient Consent form
Ethics committee approvals and patient consent for participation in research studies
All papers reporting studies involving human participants, human data or human tissue must state:
If ethical approval is not required or is exempt, then a statement mentioning the same should be included in the submitted manuscript, with reasons for the same.
A statement about whether written or verbal informed consent was obtained from the patients to participate in the research should be included in the submitted manuscript. If the requirement for informed consent to participate has been waived by the Ethics Committee or Institutional Review Board (i.e., where it has been deemed that consent would be impossible or impracticable to obtain), please state this.
The journal does not consider Animal Research or Animal Studies for publication. Submissions based on animal studies will be rejected without review.
The journal follows the recommendations of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) for clinical trial registration (https://www.icmje.org/recommendations/browse/publishing-and-editorial-issues/clinical-trial-registration.html ). According to ICMJE, “Clinical trial is any research project that prospectively assigns people or a group of people to an intervention, with or without concurrent comparison or control groups, to study the relationship between a health-related intervention and a health outcome.”
The authors are required to include Data Availability Statement in the articles that report results derived from research data. Data Availability Statements should include information on where data supporting the results reported in the article can be found. The statement should include that the data set used in the current study is available (option as appropriate) a. repository name b. name of the public domain resources c. data availability within the article or its supplementary materials d. available on request from (contact name/email id) e. dataset can be made available after the embargo period due to commercial restrictions. Where research data are not publicly available, this must be stated in the manuscript along with any conditions for accessing the data.
The journal adheres to the ICMJE recommendation for authorship requirements. All those designated as authors should meet all four criteria for authorship, and all who meet the four criteria should be identified as authors.
It is the collective responsibility of the authors, not the journal to which the work is submitted, to determine that all people named as authors meet all four criteria; it is not the role of journal editors to determine who qualifies or does not qualify for authorship or to arbitrate authorship conflicts. The criteria used to determine the order in which authors are listed on the by-line may vary and are to be decided collectively by the author group and not by editors. One author should assume the role of “corresponding author” who is mainly responsible for communication with the journal during the manuscript submission, peer-review, and publication processes. The corresponding author should also be accessible following publication to address any criticisms of the work and assist with any requests from the journal for data or additional information, should those requests come up.
The journal considers the final author list (names and the authorship sequence) to be complete at the time of submission of the Open Access License Agreement form. Request for removal or addition of an author after signing the Agreement will not be entertained. If the authors have a genuine reason for changes to authorship and authorship sequence, the authors should complete the “Authorship change request form” with a signed statement of agreement for the requested change from all listed authors and from the author to be removed or added and send it to editor@BJoTGH.com along with a letter explaining the reasons for the proposed changes. The Journal Editor-in-Chief will consider these requests on a case-to-case basis.
All the authors are required to provide an ORCiD iD when submitting the manuscript to the journal. Authors can register for an ORCiD iD at https://orcid.org/register
The authors are required to provide information about their individual contributory roles according to CRediT (Contributor Roles Taxonomy). There are 14 selections that the authors can choose from, and more than one contribution can be selected for each author. Authors can refer to https://credit.niso.org/ for more information.
Contributors who meet fewer than all 4 of the above criteria for authorship should not be listed as authors, but they should be acknowledged. The “Acknowledgement section” should specify
Conflicts of interest can be defined as financial and non-financial in relation to the work. Authors are required to disclose any financial interests or affiliations with institutions, organizations, or companies that are mentioned in the manuscript or whose products and services are mentioned in the manuscript, and any competing interest that could be perceived as a bias in the work. If the submission is authored by the editorial board member, a statement mentioning the same should be included. The authors are required to complete the ICMJE disclosure form at the time of submission. Click to download ICMJE Disclosure Form.
The authors are required to declare the funding sources received for the research submitted to the journal. The authors should provide the Funder name, Award Number and Grant Recipient, and the role of funders. If there are no funders, the authors must state "This study did not receive any funding."
The figures, data tables, and charts that are submitted should be owned solely by the author(s). If this requirement cannot be fulfilled, then the author(s) should acquire permission from the original F holder for the purpose of re-use in the journal. Obtaining permission is the sole responsibility of the author(s) and should be completed before the acceptance of the article in the journal. Credit must be included for all copyrighted material in the figure legend with a statement that permission has been obtained.
The journal permits submissions of papers that have been posted on pre-print servers. The authors should mention this on the title page when submitting and include the name of the preprint server and DOI for the preprint. Authors should not post an updated version of their paper on the preprint server while it is being peer-reviewed. If the paper is accepted, the authors must include a link on the preprint to the final version of your paper.
All types of submissions/papers should follow a standard format as described in the below “Manuscript Component” section.
EQUATOR Network reporting guidelines (https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/) must be followed depending on the type of study. At the time of submission, the authors should upload the relevant checklist for the specific study type. The EQUATOR wizard (https://www.goodreports.org/) can help you find the right reporting checklist and appropriate guidelines for your type of study. Other resources can be found at NLM’s Research Reporting Guidelines and Initiatives (https://www.nlm.nih.gov/services/research_report_guide.html).
Reports of original clinical and basic research of interest are the primary material to be published as original articles.
The Journal encourages the submission of case reports that highlight practical diagnostic and/or management considerations. The case reports should define 1 to a maximum of three patients. Identifying information within written descriptions, photographs, or pedigrees should not be given.
Case-series is a descriptive study design and as the name suggests, it is just a series of cases of any disease or disease discrepancy that one might observe in one’ clinical practice etc.
The Journal accepts Letters to the Editor that raises some issues related to recently published articles (last 6 months) in the British Journal of Translational Global Health (BJoTGH). The letters should not exceed (1000 words) of text and 4 references. While not all “Letters to the Editor” will be published, those that are judged worthwhile will be forwarded to the authors of the articles in question or to selected experts in order to provide the opportunity for a response. Whenever possible, they will be published with the reply of the author of the published article.
Books for review shall be posted on the journal, and received reviews shall be published, at the discretion of the Editorial Board. Every book up for review shall also be reviewed by certain reviewers on invitation by the Editorial Board, usually a stalwart/pioneer in the subject in question.
Announcements of conferences, meetings, courses, awards, and other events of interest to the readers should be submitted with the name and address of the person from whom additional information can be sought. These can contain up to 200-300 words.
Others: The section on imaging presents challenging radiological issues that are relevant to clinicians. To apprise the readers of path-breaking publications in other Head and Neck journals, the abstracts of selected articles are published in the "journal scan" section.
The BJoTGH will have regular sections of
The British Journal of Translational Global Health (BJoTGH) is an open-access international peer-reviewed journal from the UK. The Journal is associated with the faculties of the University Alliance and the British Academy of Oral Biology, De Montfort University, Leicester, University of Bolton, UK, and the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, Glasgow.
BJoTGH publishes original research, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, commentary, views & ideas, news & events of global interest. This is a quarterly journal; two issues will be thematic each year.
Editorials are written by journal editors or guest editors. Please contact the editor-in-chief with suggestions for theme editorials.
Opinions and viewpoints will be the views of the author regarding an issue of translational global health- their directions and dilemmas. Opinions and viewpoints will not provide a research result, and the abstract will not be required. The word count is limited to 1500, with one table or figure and up to 10 references with succinct messages. This will be considered as the personal views of the authors. The contents will not reflect the official opinion of the Journal and editorial board members. The contents will be assessed by Editors-in-Chief and his expert members for any technical editing.
The manuscript from the original research will not exceed 4000 words (words used in the abstract, tables, charts, figures, and references will not be included in the count). Six tables/figures and 35 references are the maximum limits. The abstract should not exceed 400 words. A structured abstract with Background, Methods, Findings, and Conclusions will be submitted in the manuscript. The word count for systematic reviews and meta-analyses may exceed 4500, with 10 tables/figures, and 45 references (words used in abstract, tables, charts, figures, and references will not be included in the count).
The manuscript will be submitted online. The managing editor will check (within 24 hours) whether the manuscript follows the set instructions of the journal and is formatted in compliance with the scope of the Journal;
The BJoTGH will follow the authorship criteria developed by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE. https://www.icmje.org/ ): “The ICMJE recommends that authorship be based on the following 4 criteria:
The BJoTGH complies with the ICMJE uniform disclosure form. We request authors complete the form available at the ICMJE site https://www.icmje.org/ and include them during submission. The BJoTGH will request its reviewers to declare a possible conflict of interest on the manuscripts under review. It is mandatory for authors’ declared contributions, and that will be mentioned at the end of the article.
The Editorial Board of the BJoTGH will ensure the scientific integrity and merit of the research process by checking the ethics flowcharts developed by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE: https://publicationethics.org/resources/flowcharts/complete-set-english.This is needed to avoid possible misconduct during research.
Policy for submissions by members of the editorial teamMembers of the Editorial Board of the Journal are clinicians, academicians, policy strategists, allied health professionals, and researchers. It may happen that they would want to submit their articles to the BJoTGH. They must avoid potential conflicts of interest, especially in cases of submissions from decision-making issues. Importantly, the editors and Editorial Board (EB) members of the BJoTGH will follow the guidelines for good editorial practice recommended by international editorial organizations, such as the World Association of Medical Editors (WAME: https://www.wame.org/ and COPE https://publicationethics.org/resources/flowcharts/complete-set-english. They will follow the same guideline for submission. However, the review of such manuscripts will not be handled by the submitting editor(s); the review process will be supervised, and the decisions made by a senior editor (recommended by the editor-in-chief) will act independently of the other editors. In some cases, the review process will be handled by an outside independent expert to minimize possible bias in reviewing submissions from editors. The submissions from the members of EB of this Journal can be considered without charging a fee or with a discounted article processing charge (APC).
Manuscripts should meet the instruction to authors, and a general requirements suggested by ICMJE https://www.icmje.org/ The ethical conduct of research and protection of the privacy of patients and study subjects will comply with the Declaration of Helsinki – Ethical Principles for Medical Research Involving Human Subjects, developed by the World Medical Association (https://www.wma.net/policies-post/wma-declaration-of-helsinki-ethical-principles-for-medical-research-involving-human-subjects) Ethical conduct includes mandatory registration of clinical trials in a public trail registry as a condition for manuscript submission to BJoTGH, as defined in ICMJE registration policy, and/or national research council/statutory body of the country from where the author conducted research. The report of ethical clearance and/or declaration regarding research review and ethical clearance will be submitted online.
The name, affiliation, email (official and private), and phone number(optional) will be provided by all the authors including the corresponding author.
PRISMA Flow Diagram: http://prisma-statement.org/PRISMAStatement/FlowDiagram.aspx?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1
STROBE for reporting observational studies in epidemiology:- https://www.strobe-statement.org/
CONSORT for randomized controlled trials. https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/consort/
RIGHT for reporting health care practice guidelines. http://www.right-statement.org/
PS. We draw attention to two new reporting guidelines relevant to global health: STROBE-NI – Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology for New-born Infection and GATHER – Guideline for Accurate and Transparent Health Estimates Reporting. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27633910/
The latest updates of reporting guidelines are available from EQUATOR Network – an international initiative that seeks to enhance the reliability and value of medical research literature by promoting transparent and accurate reporting of research studies. https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/cheers/
PS. We require authors to submit relevant checklists and flow diagrams with their manuscripts. Please check the EQUATOR Network to identify the reporting guideline relevant to your manuscript.
The manuscript must have separate documents for:
Microsoft Word 97-2013 or higher document file must be used to submit a manuscript. The text must be double spaced with 1" margins and justified to the left-hand margin. Refer the "styles" or document templates. The "Normal" Word format is recommended. (Arial 12-point text is preferred) Please number all the pages.
A cover letter is a letter addressed to the Editor-in-Chief of the journal stating why the journal should consider your article for publication.
The title of the manuscript should appear at the top of the first page. The title must clearly state what the article is about. Avoid using abbreviations in the title. The title should include the study design, example, ‘case control study’ or ‘systematic review’.
Full name of each author (first name, middle initial and last name) followed by each author’s highest academic degree(s) and designation. Name of department(s) and institution(s) along with complete address such as city, state and country with which each author is affiliated and to which work should be attributed. ORCID should be included. The name of the corresponding author should be clearly mentioned. The authorship sequence must be determined by the authors before the submission. For any changes in the authorship or authorship order after the first revision submission, see Authorship Section.
When submitting author names please note that authors should be listed in First Name –Middle Name- Surname order. If an author is submitted as "JR Doe" or "Jane Robert Doe" the author’s name will be published in "How to cite" as "Doe JR."
If an author changes affiliation before the work is published, his or her affiliation should reflect where a major part of the work was done. The current affiliation and contact details should be listed in a footnote or in the acknowledgment section.
To include the name, address, telephone number, fax number, and e-mail of corresponding author.
A short title that is running head of no more than 45 characters, including spaces to be provided.
*Note: The author names along with their complete affiliations need to be attached in Step 4 of submission page, whereas the main document, tables, figures, graphs and other docs will be attached in Step 5.
All submitted manuscripts should contain a separate document - “Declarations” and include the following information. If a declaration is not applicable to the manuscript, the authors must still include the heading and state ‘Not applicable’ underneath with an explanation to justify why a declaration was not applicable.
All articles must include a structured abstract of approximately 200 to 300 words and only include material appearing in the main body of the manuscript. Authors are required to indicate the relevance in a statement of clinical significance within the abstract of the manuscript as well as at the end of the main body of the text. Clinical trial studies should mention the clinical trial registration number at the end of the abstract section. Structured abstracts vary according to the type of article. All abstracts must be organized into a structured format appropriate to the type of article using the headings listed in the following table:
Primary Research | Literature Reviews | Case Reports | Clinical Techniques |
---|---|---|---|
Aim & Background | Aim & Background | Aim & Background | Aim & Background |
Methods | Methods | Case Description | Technique |
Results | Results | Conclusion | Conclusion |
Conclusion | Conclusion | Clinical Significance | Clinical Significance |
Clinical Significance | Clinical Significance |
A list of three to ten keywords contained in the article must be listed below the abstract. A minimum of three and maximum ten keywords are required, and they should contain the type of research such as systematic review, randomized clinical trial, cohort study, case-control study, laboratory research, case report. Selecting the keywords is important because they will be used to search for the article on PubMed and other Internet resources. MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) is the NLM controlled vocabulary thesaurus used for indexing articles for PubMed. Authors are encouraged to use keywords from MeSH database (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/).
The body of the manuscript must be organized into a format appropriate for the type of article using bold headings as listed in the following table:
Primary Research | Literature Reviews | Case Reports | Clinical Techniques |
---|---|---|---|
Introduction | Introduction | Introduction | Introduction |
Materials & Methods | Methods | Case Description | Technique |
Results | Results | Discussion | Discussion |
Discussion | Discussion | Conclusion | Conclusion |
Conclusion | Conclusion | Clinical Significance | Clinical Significance |
Clinical Significance | Clinical Significance | References | References |
References | References |
Describe the study's context or background (that is, the nature of the problem and its significance). Indicate the precise aim or goal of the research, as well as any hypotheses that were tested during the study or observation. Cite only references that are relevant; do not include information or findings from the work being described.
This section should carefully describe the study design, selection of the observational or experimental subjects (human or animals) and methods and materials used, including sample size and statistical approaches. Commonly used techniques or methods should be referred to appropriate references and should be described in brief. However, unique experiments, methods, technique should be described in adequate detail to allow other workers to reproduce the results. The Methods section should include a statement indicating that the research was approved by an independent local, regional or national review body (e.g., ethics committee, institutional review board). Information regarding mandatory clinical trial registration and patient consent (including the type of consent) should be provided. Refer “Protection of Research Participants” for more details. Experimental methodology should be concisely and appropriately explained. Commercially produced materials, devices, software must be followed by name of manufacturer and location. Statistical methods should be clearly specified. Provide adequate information about statistical techniques so that a knowledgeable reader with access to the source data can evaluate the methods' suitability for the study and confirm the stated results. Quantify results where possible and display them with the proper measurement error or uncertainty indications (such as confidence intervals). For further information, refer https://www.icmje.org/recommendations/browse/manuscript-preparation/preparing-for-submission.html
This section should succinctly state the results without any lengthy discussion or interpretation of individual data. Only the most significant observations should be highlighted or summarised; do not repeat all the information from the tables or figures in the text. Data should be provided for all primary and secondary outcomes listed in the Methods Section. Technical information and supplemental materials can be included in an appendix, where they will be available, but won't disrupt the text's flow. Statistical tests should be clearly defined, and statistical significance should be shown in both figures and tables with the help of superscripts such as a, b, c, rather than *, ¶, # or other nonsequential symbols.
The discussion should focus on the new and important findings of the study. The observations should be related to other relevant studies in a logical sequence. It should summarize, but not repeat the Results. The Discussion should end with a summary of the data and conclusions. Avoid making unqualified comments or drawing conclusions that are not sufficiently supported by the data. Instead, connect the results to the study's objectives. Make a distinction between clinical and statistical significance, and refrain from discussing economic costs and advantages unless the paper contains the necessary economic data and analyses. Avoid claiming priority or making references to incomplete work. When necessary, present new hypotheses; nevertheless, clearly identify them. Limitations of the study should also be mentioned.
To include the conclusions of the study and the future research directions.
This section should include 3 – 4 sentences about the clinical significance of the study results.
Include a list of abbreviations along with its description used in the manuscript. Use only standard abbreviations. The spelled-out abbreviation followed by the abbreviation in parentheses should be used on first mention unless the abbreviation is a standard unit of measurement.
Bibliography should list references in order of their appearance in the text (not alphabetically) and should follow PubMed Central guidelines along with Vancouver Style. References should follow the standards summarized in the NLM’s Sample References webpage (https://www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/uniform_requirements.html) and detailed in the NLM’s Citing Medicine, 2nd edition (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK7256/ ). Place the number of the references at the end of the sentence as superscript to which the reference is related. Use commas to separate multiple reference numbers.
For example: "Bond strength of composite resin to dentin is influenced by the presence of a smear layer.4,5,8-15
If more than one reference is contained in a sentence, then number the reference immediately following the text that refers to the reference. For example: "Bailey2 found that 46% showed signs of metastasis while Varner3 found only 28%."
Sample examples of the references are mentioned below:
AL-Harbi SA, Farsi N. Microleakage of Ormocer-based restorative material in primary teeth: an in vivo study [abstract]. J Clin Pediatr Dent 2007;32(1):13-18.
Keith H Bridwell, Ronald L DeWald. The textbook of spinal surgery. 3rd ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins 2011. 2112 p.
Suken A Shah, Harvey Smith. Operative treatment of neuromuscular spinal deformity. In: Thomas JE, Baron SL, Andrew WM., editors. Surgical Management of Spinal Deformities. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders Elsevier, 2009;p 157-166.
Mayer M. Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery: A surgical manual. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer 2005;2 496 p.
Ali A Baaj, Praveen V Mummaneni. Handbook of Spine Surgery. 2011, 480 p. Available at: http://books.google.co.in/books/about/Handbook_of_Spine_Surgery.html?id=-MRYK8l40SYCandredir_esc=y
Prasanthi LK. A study to determine the effectiveness of snake and ladder game on common ailments’ among primary school children of a selected school, Bengaluru 2008.
Lawrence, Ruth A. A review of the medical benefits and contraindications to breastfeeding in the United States [Internet]. Arlington (VA): National Center for Education in Maternal and Child Health; 1997 Oct [cited 2000 Apr 24]. p. 40. Available from: http://www.ncemch.org/pubs/PDFs/breastfeedingTIB.pdf
When preprints are cited in submitted manuscripts, the citation should clearly indicate that the reference is a preprint. You should include the word “preprint” following the citation information in the reference list and indicate that the cited material is a preprint in the text. The citation should include the link to the preprint and DOI if the preprint archive issues DOIs.
Figures
The images are to be placed in numerical order following the reference list and accompanied by a legend describing the content of the image as follows. In addition, a separate file containing the figures and figure legends should be uploaded in the submission system. Photographs must be in colour, in focus, free of distracting artifacts, and consistent in exposure. Place any required labels or arrows on images prior to uploading. Images must be at least 600 by 450 pixels (proportional height) in size when in landscape orientation with a resolution of at least 300 pixels per inch. Graphs should be approximately 500 pixels wide so that all labelling can be read with data points clearly visible. Substantially, larger images must be avoided to prevent file transmission and electronic manuscript processing errors. Radiographs, drawings, and graphs can be in black and white, but colour images are preferred.
File names for images must be clearly labelled according to the order in which they appear, i.e., Fig. 1, Fig. 2 and Figs 1 and 2 or Figs 1-5 and so on in brackets. In a running sentence, it should be spelt out as Figure 1). Images can only be submitted in TIFF, PSD, PNG, and JPEG file formats. If images are produced in PowerPoint, then they must be saved as a JPEG file before uploading during the submission process.
Example,
Call outs must be placed in the body of the manuscript to indicate where an image is to be located. Example:
“A bicoronal incision was made and Raney clips were placed on both sides of the wound to maintain meticulous hemostasis. Scalp was dissected to the temporal and supraorbital region through subgaleal plane (Fig. 3).”
Tables
Tables are placed in numerical order at the end of the manuscript following the list of figures. A legend is to accompany all tables and call outs are to be placed in the body of the text to indicate where the table is to be in the article. The tables function in Microsoft Word is to be used to create data tables rather than using columns of tabbed information.
Example,
“A total of 44 patients who were admitted with depressed skull fracture and who underwent operative treatment were included in the study where in there were 30 males and 14 females. The mean age of patients was 26.95 ± 14.87 years (range being from 6years to 65 years). More than half of the patients were in the age group of 15-35 years (Table 1).
Table 1: Demographic and hospital stay
Authors may submit supplemental digital content to enhance their article's text. Supplemental digital content may include additional documents like questionnaires, graphs, tables, figures, database and videos that are additional material. Supplemental digital content will not appear in the article itself but will appear online, accessible by a URL embedded in the article. Cite all supplemental digital content consecutively in the text. Legend should include the type of material submitted, should be clearly labeled as "Supplemental Digital Content" or "Supplemental Video," and should provide a brief description of the supplemental content.
Once all the preparation is complete and you have all the information and files ready for submission, please go to the Homepage and register as an author through ‘Our New Author Registration’. Once you are registered on the website https://www.britishjournalglobalhealth.co.uk, you will be sent a username and password to the provided e-mail address. Using the same, you will log in to the journal’s website https://www.britishjournalglobalhealth.co.uk and select Author.
After logging into the author’s account, follow the steps for submission available under Manual for Manuscript Submission. Once the submission is completed, you will get a system-generated ID for eg. JPJ1296170815. Using this ID, you can track the status of your manuscript from submission to https://www.britishjournalglobalhealth.co.uk/manuscriptTrack/BJOTGH.
A similar process to that used to submit the manuscript for the first time should be followed when submitting the revised version online. However, when submitting the revised version, there is no requirement to include the "Title Page" or "Covering Letter" files. Authors should add the "reviewers' remarks" and point-by-point clarification at the beginning of the revised file when submitting a revised paper. Additionally, authors must highlight the modified text in the article to indicate the changes.
Once the article is accepted, a confirmation mail will be sent to the corresponding author. After about 2-4 weeks post acceptance, the author(s) may write to editor@BJoTGH.com in order to know the issue placement. A galley proof of the article will be sent to the corresponding author for necessary changes just before the issue is to be published.
Once the galley proof of the accepted article is ready, it will be then sent to the Corresponding author. In addition to editing text, you can also comment on figures/tables and must answer the queries provided in the query form that will be sent along with the PDF proof. Web-based proofing provides a faster and less error-prone process by allowing you to directly type your corrections, eliminating the potential introduction of errors.
Please use this proof only for checking the typesetting, editing, completeness, and correctness of the text, tables, and figures. Significant changes to the article as accepted for publication will only be considered at this stage with permission from the Editor. It is important to ensure that all corrections are sent back to us in one communication. Please check carefully before replying. Proofs must be checked carefully within 48 to 72 hours of receipt, as requested in the cover letter accompanying the page proofs.
The final typeset and edited version of the journal article will be available on the journal website under the ‘Online First’ tab. Once an Online First article is assigned to its final issue and given its bibliographic data, such as volume, issue, and first-page number, the hosting of the article online transitions from the Online First listing to that of the completed issue.
For the policy on corrections in the article after publication, refer to the Policy page https://www.britishjournalglobalhealth.co.uk/journal/BJOTGH/page/policy.
Reprints of articles can be obtained on special request by paying a nominal amount. Please write an e-mail to Tushar Nanda at tushar.nanda@jaypeebrothers.com for the same.
If you need any assistance regarding the submission of your manuscript, you may please contact at editor@jaypeebrothers.com/editor@BJoTGH.com.
The following documents should be uploaded in the manuscript system.
The following declaration forms should be uploaded in the manuscript system
Checklists | Study | Designs Template |
---|---|---|
CARE | For Case Reports | Download |
CONSORT | For Randomized Controlled Trials | Download |
PRISMA | for Systematic Review and Meta-analyses | Download |
STROBE | For Observational Studies | Download |
SPIRIT | For Clinical Trials Protocol studies | Download |
If you cannot find the template for your study design here, please visit https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/.