2.1. Authorship and Acknowledgements
Authors submitting a paper do so on the understanding that the manuscript have been read and approved by all authors and that all authors agree to the submission of the manuscript to the Journal.
Health in Emergencies and Disasters Quarterly adheres to the definition of authorship set based on 1) substantial contributions to conception and design of, or acquisition of data or analysis and interpretation of data, 2) drafting the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content and 3) final approval of the version to be published. Authors should meet conditions 1, 2 and 3.
It is a requirement that all authors have been accredited as appropriate upon submission of the manuscript. Contributors who do not qualify as authors should be mentioned under Acknowledgements.
Acknowledgements: Under acknowledgements please specify contributors to the article other than the authors accredited. Health in Emergencies and Disasters quarterly requires that all sources of institutional, private and corporate financial support for the work within the manuscript must be fully acknowledged, and any potential conflicts of interest noted. Grant or contribution numbers may be acknowledged, and principal grant holders should be listed. Acknowledgments should be brief and should not include thanks to anonymous referees and editors.
2.2. Ethical Approvals
Experimentation involving human subjects will only be published if such research has been conducted in full accordance with ethical principles, including the World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki (version, 2002 www.wma.net/e/policy/b3.htm) and the additional requirements, if any, of the country where the research has been carried out. Manuscripts must be accompanied by a statement that the experiments were undertaken with the understanding and written consent of each subject and according to the above mentioned principles. A statement regarding the fact that the study has been independently reviewed and approved by an ethical board should also be included. Editors reserve the right to reject papers if there are doubts as to whether appropriate procedures have been used.
2.3 Conflict of Interest and Source of Funding
Health in Emergencies and Disasters Quarterly (HDQ) as a member of Negah Journals, published by Negah Scientific publisher, is committed to apply ICMJE recommendation on “Author Responsibilities—Conflicts of Interest in authors’ conflict of interest issues. Authors should disclose, at the time of submission, information on financial conflicts of interest or other interests that may influence the manuscript. Authors should declare sources of funding for the work undertaken, too. So, completion and signing the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest is necessary for all authors and the articles submission won’t be accepted without filling this form. Also, please include this information under Acknowledgements.
2.4 Appeal of Decision
The decision on a paper is final and cannot be appealed.
2.5 Permissions
If all or parts of previously published illustrations are used permission must be obtained from the copyright holder concerned. In most cases, this will be the original publisher of the material. It is the author's responsibility to obtain these in writing and provide copies to the Publishers.
2.6. Plagiarism
Health in Emergencies and Disasters Quarterly (HDQ) as a member of Negah Journals, has accepted all terms and conditions of Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) on plagiarism. So, in any case of plagiarism, which is brought to the journal’s editors attention and accompanied with convincing evidence, we act based on flowcharts and workflows determined in COPE. Meanwhile, to detect and prevent plagiarism in the journal articles, all submissions will be checked with iTheticate software in both stages of submission and acceptance.In the first stage below 30% and in the second stage below 20% is acceptable.
For more information on the journal’s ethical Principles, please refer to following links:
- HDQ’s Principles of Publishing Ethics
- HDQ’s Ethical Principles for Medical Research
- HDQ’s Ethical Principles for Psychological Research
3. MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSION PROCEDURE
Manuscripts can be submitted electronically via the online submission in http://hdq.uswr.ac.ir . The online submission and peer review site enables immediate distribution of manuscripts and consequentially speeds up the review process. It also allows authors to track the status of their own manuscripts.
3.1. Getting Started online submission
• Launch your web and go to the journal's online Submission Site http://hdq.uswr.ac.ir
• Log-in or, if you are a new user, click on "register here".
• Log-in and select "Author"
3.2. Submitting Your Manuscript
You need to prepare the necessary files in the acceptable formats before submitting the manuscript. These files should be uploaded in the identified places during the submission process.
3.3. Manuscript Files Accepted
Manuscripts written in English can be uploaded in Word (.doc) or Rich Text Format (rft) files (not write-protected) plus separate figure files. GIF, JPEG, PICT or Bitmap files are acceptable for submission, but only high-resolution TIF or EPS files are suitable for printing. The text file must contain the entire manuscript including title, abstract, text, references. No embedded figures and tables, information to identify the authors such as title page or acknowledgement are allowed in the main text file. In the text file, please reference figures as for instance "Figure 1", "Figure " etc to match the tag name you choose for all individual figure files uploaded.
Manuscripts should be formatted as described in the Author Guidelines below.
3.4. Double-Blinded Peer-Review
All manuscripts submitted to Health in Emergencies and Disaster Quarterly (HDQ) will be peer reviewed by two experts in the field. Health in Emergencies and Disaster Quarterly uses double blinded peer review.
3.5. E-mail Confirmation of Submission
After submission, all the authors will receive an e-mail to confirm the receipt of the manuscript. If you do not receive the confirmation e-mail after 24 hours contact the editorial office.
4. MANUSCRIPT TYPES ACCEPTED
The editorial policy of the Health in Emergencies and Disaster quarterly (HDQ) is to encourage the publication of evidence-based research articles.
Original Research Articles: must describe novel and significant observations and provide sufficient detail so that the findings can be critically evaluated and, if necessary, repeated.
Reviews: Reviews are selected for their broad general interest; all are refereed by experts in the field who are asked to comment on issues such as timeliness, general interest and balanced treatment of controversies, as well as on scientific accuracy. Reviews should take a broad view of the field rather than merely summarizing the authors own previous work, so extensive citation of the authors own publications is discouraged.
Case Reports: Authors are invited to submit case reports on topics of relevance to the aim and scope of Health in Emergencies and Disaster Quarterly (HDQ). The reports should be around 2000 words and follow the general author guidelines of Health in Emergencies and Disaster quarterly.
5. MANUSCRIPT FORMAT AND STRUCTURE
Language: The language of publication is English, and the journal just accepts manuscripts, which are written in English. Authors for whom English is a second language have their manuscripts professionally edited by an English-speaking person before submission to make sure the English is of high quality.
Abbreviations, Symbols and Nomenclature: Health in Emergencies and Disaster Quarterly adhere to the conventions outlined in Units, Symbols and Abbreviations: A Guide for Medical and Scientific Editors and Authors. Non-standard abbreviations must be used three or more times and written out completely in the text when first used.
Format: Manuscripts should be submitted in Microsoft Office Word 2003 (.doc) format; please:
Structure: All manuscripts submitted to the Health in Emergencies and Disaster quarterly should include: Title page (in a separate file), abstract, main text and references (as the main text file), references, tables, figures and figure legends as appropriate (in separate file), acknowledgements, financial support, grants and any other information that can reveal the identity of the authors (in separate files).
*Original Research Article should include Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussions, Conclusion and Ethical considerations.
*Reviews and Case Reports do not need to follow the usual divisions of original research articles, but should contain appropriate headings and subheadings.
Acknowledgements should follow the main text. Health in Emergencies and Disaster quarterly requires that all sources of institutional, private and corporate financial support for the work within the manuscript must be fully acknowledged, and any potential conflicts of interest noted. Grant or contribution numbers may be acknowledged, and principal grant holders should be listed. Acknowledgments should be brief and should not include thanks to anonymous referees and editors.
The acknowledgements should be submitted in a separate file from the main text of the manuscript.
References should be numbered consecutively (Vancouver style) ordered in which they are first mentioned in the text. References cited only in tables or figure legends should be numbered in accordance with the sequence established by the first identification in the text of the particular table or figure.Please use Endnote or similar reference managing software to insert the references.
Journal articles: Use the style of the examples below, which are based on the formats used by the NLM in Index Medicus. The titles of journals should be abbreviated according to the style used in Index Medicus Journal
Lobbezoo F, van der Zaag J, Naeije M. Bruxism: its multiple causes and its effects on dental implants - an updated review. J Oral Rehabil. 2006; 33: 293-300
(If more than six authors please list the first six authors followed by et al.):
Takata Y, Ansai T, Awano S, Fukuhara M, Sonoki K, Wakisaka M et al. Chewing ability and quality of life in an 80-year-old population. J Oral Rehabil. 2006; 33: 330-334
Books:
Fejerskov O, Kidd E. (eds) Dental caries: The Disease and its Clinical Management.Copenhagen: Blackwell Munksgaard; 2003.
For more information on the journal reference guideline, please click here.
Tables, Figures and Figure Legends
Tables: should be double-spaced with no vertical rulings, with a single bold ruling beneath the column titles. Units of measurements must be included in the column title.
Figures: All figures should be planned to fit within either 1 column width (8.0 cm), 1.5 column widths (13.0 cm) or 2 column widths (17.0 cm). Lettering on figures should be in a clear, sans serif typeface (e.g. Helvetica); if possible, the same typeface should be used for all figures in a paper. After reduction for publication, upper-case text and numbers should be at least 1.5-2.0 mm high (10 point Helvetica). After reduction symbols should be at least 2.0-3.0 mm high (10 point). In general, multi-part figures should be arranged as they would appear in the final version. Any special requirements (such as the separation distance of stereo pairs) should be clearly specified.