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Getting published in scientific, impact factor journals

Getting published in scientific, impact factor journals. Kathleen Fahy PhD, RM, FACM Editor in Chief of Women and Birth : The Journal of the Australian College of Midwifery Professor of Midwifery, Southern Cross University, Gold Coast Campus. Aim.

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Getting published in scientific, impact factor journals

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  1. Getting published in scientific, impact factor journals Kathleen Fahy PhD, RM, FACM Editor in Chief of Women and Birth: The Journal of the Australian College of Midwifery Professor of Midwifery, Southern Cross University, Gold Coast Campus

  2. Aim • To enable beginning researchers/writers to have the well-founded confidence to submit their scientific articles to impact factor journals and complete dissertations that will pass first time. Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  3. Objectives • To enable participants to: • Apply the skills of good scientific essay writing; argument and evidence, clarity, brevity, structure, flow, coherence; • Write compelling introductions, conclusions and structured abstracts; • Write a research paper using the AIMRDC structure; • write a research paper that conforms to reporting guidelines approved by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE). Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  4. Key Elements of Good Scientific Writing • Have an argument: (hypothesis, thesis) • Use evidence to support your argument • Achieve clarity & brevity with: • careful and consistent word choice • short sentences with subject first • Clear and logical structure, flow • Coherence and avoidance of extraneous ideas or data Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  5. Word Choices • Accuracy • Define your key terms • Choose precise words and use the same word consistently each time • Brevity • Use the fewest words possible • Clarity • Use simple words so that an educated reader can understand you Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  6. Accuracy in Word Choices Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  7. Simplicity in Word Choices Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  8. Scientific Sentences A sentence is a group of words about a single idea, which contains a least one subject and at least one verb. Scientific sentences are short. The subject of the sentence comes first. Jesus wept. (The shortest sentence in the Bible). Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  9. Write Short Sentences Poor Sentence When tobacco smoke is inhaled it takes 10-20 seconds for nicotine to be delivered to the central nervous system via the arterial circulation. Improved Sentence Nicotine takes 10—20 seconds to reach the brain after inhalation. Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  10. Why Improved? Poor Sentence When tobacco smoke (not the main subject) is inhaled it takes 10-20 seconds for nicotine to be delivered (passive verb) to the central nervous system via the arterial circulation. Improved Shorter Sentence Nicotine (main subject) takes 10—20 seconds to reach (active verb, simple language) the brain after inhalation. Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  11. Use Active (not passive) Voice • In the active voice the subject names the actor • Example: Passive • Participants under aged 14, who did not get parental consent, were not recruited. • Improved: Active • I decided not to recruit participants under age 14 unless they had parental consent. Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  12. Characteristics of Good Paragraphs Paragraph begins with a topic sentence (i.e. the main idea) and the paragraph has: • Unity: Each sentence is on the topic of the paragraph. • Coherence: The relationship between the sentences is clear and logical. • Development: The main idea of the paragraph is well supported with specific evidence, examples and details. Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  13. Paragraphs • Organisation • Topic sentence appears first and gives the overview • Supporting sentences give details in logical order • Use transition words to link paragraphs • Length • Paragraphs should be a minimum of 3 sentences Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  14. What is wrong with this paragraph? Women who have an episiotomy more frequently report painful intercourse and marital problems six months after birth. Compared to women who had a 1st or 2nd degree tear, episiotomy is associated with higher rates of perineal trauma in subsequent births. Episiotomy is associated with long-term morbidity. Urinary incontinence is preventable. Problems • Topic sentence is 2nd last • Last sentence is not related to the topic of the paragraph Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  15. Improved Paragraph Episiotomy is associated with long-term morbidity. Compared to women who had a 1st or 2nd degree tear, episiotomy is associated with higher rates of perineal trauma in subsequent births. Women who had an episiotomy were more likely to report painful intercourse and ongoing marital problems six months after birth. Better because: • Topic sentence first and gives overview • Supporting sentences give detail and support • All sentences relate to the topic sentence Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  16. Generic Structure of Scientific Paper: AIMRDC • Abstract • Introduction • Methods • Results • Discussion • Conclusion References ICMJE (2013) Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing, and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals. Available at: www.icmje.org Accessed September 8th, 2013. Cargill, M. O’Connor, P. (2009) Writing Scientific Research Articles: Strategy and Steps. Wiley-Blackburn. West Sussex, UK Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  17. Requirements for Reporting Different Types of Studies Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  18. Research Abstracts • Background (context) • Purpose (aim or question) • Methods (participants, setting, data collection and analysis) • Results (main findings, statistical significance, effect size) • Discussion/Conclusion (clinical significance, recommendations, limitations) NB: Abstract must accurately reflect the content of the article Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  19. Effective Introductions to Research Papers • Write in a way that Takes to Reader from General to Specific, from the Known to the Unknown Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  20. Elements of Effective Introductions to Research Articles • Problem and broad context for present study • What is already known • Need for present study made clear • Purpose/Aim or Question for present study • Define key terms • Optional justification for the present study NB Cite only directly relevant research. Do not report data or results from present study. Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  21. Methods Section of Research Paper • Purpose: to demonstrate that the methods were scientifically rigorous and thus give confidence that the results of the study are credible. Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  22. Methods Sections (Generic) • Selection and Description of Participants • Clearly describe the source population • Describe recruitment methods • Provide a statement of ethical approval • State (and justify) the eligibility and exclusion criteria • provide descriptive data about relevant demographic variables Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  23. Methods Section (Generic) • Technical Information • Specify the study’s main and secondary objectives or outcomes • Identify methods, equipment and procedures in sufficient detail to allow readers to evaluate methodological rigour • Reference established methods and provide brief descriptions and references for newer methods • give the reasons for using the chosen methods • Identify or describe precisely all drugs or human delivered interventions • Identify methodological limitations. Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  24. Methods Section (Generic) • Statistical Methods • Describe in enough detail for reader to be able judge credibility • Reference credible sources for methods of collection and analysis • Define statistical terms, abbreviations, and most symbols • Specify the statistical software package(s) and versions used • Use statistical methods which convey important information about effect size and precision of estimates • Distinguish pre-specified from exploratory analyses • When possible, quantify findings and present appropriate indicators of measurement error (e.g. confidence intervals) Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  25. Results (Generic) • Only report results relevant to the hypothesis/question in your Introduction • Data are facts (numbers); they cannot stand alone • Results are the meaning of the data; they must be stated • Most data belong in figures, graphs and tables • Present data after stating the results they support • Statistics belong with data and therefore should (mostly) be in the figures, graphs and tables Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  26. Results (Generic) • Emphasize only the most important results in text • Provide data on all primary and secondary outcomes (mentioned in your methods section) • Put supplementary materials in an appendix (online) • Give numeric results, not just derivatives (e.g. parentages) • Specify how derivatives were calculated, and their statistical significance • Restrict tables and figures to those needed to explain the argument • Use graphs as an alternative to tables; do not duplicate data Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  27. Discussion/Conclusion • Purpose: “To emphasise the new and important aspects of the studyand the conclusions that follow from them in the contextof the totality of the best available evidence”. ICMJE, (2013) p.14 Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  28. Discussion/Conclusion (Generic) • Briefly summarise the main findings • Thenexplore possible explanations • Then compare and contrast your results with results from relevantstudies • Link the conclusions to the aim/s of your study • Ensure all claims are adequatelysupported by the data • Distinguishbetween clinical and statistical significance • Make recommendations (research, practice, theory) • Avoid referring to work-in-progress • Be appropriately understated (Avoid boasting) Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  29. References The Vancouver style of referencing (superscript numbers) is used predominantly in the medical/health journals, including Women and Birth. Primary Source • Patrias K. Citing medicine: the NLM style guide for authors, editors, and publishers [Internet]. 2nd ed. Wendling DL, technical editor. Bethesda (MD): National Library of Medicine (US); 2007 - [updated 2011 Sep 15; cited 10th September, 2013]. Available from: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/citingmedicine Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  30. Main Reasons Articles Rejected Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

  31. Good Writing is Hard Work • Experienced, well published authors still take weeks and months to write and refine their papers. • Expect 10-20 drafts to be written before you have achieved: • Strong clear, focused argument • Good use of evidence/examples to support your augment • Brevity • Accuracy/consistency of word choices • Explained the novelty and value of your contribution in relation to existing best-evidence Kathleen Fahy Editor Women and Birth

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