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期刊名称:AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY

ISSN:0004-8674
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON, ENGLAND, EC1Y 1SP
  出版社网址:http://informahealthcare.com/
期刊网址:http://informahealthcare.com/loi/anp
影响因子:5.744
主题范畴:PSYCHIATRY

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

 Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry is published by Blackwell Publishing Asia on behalf of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (RANZCP) to provide a medium for the publication of high quality, peer-reviewed, original research articles, reviews and case reports in the field of psychiatry. In general, all articles submitted are peer reviewed by at least two researchers expert in the field.

 

Indexed/Abstracted in

  • Academic Search (EBSCO)
  • APAIS
  • ASSIA
  • Australian Family and Society Abstracts
  • Australian Medical Index
  • Biological Abstracts (Produced by BIOSIS)
  • Biomedical Reference (EBSCO)
  • Cambridge Scientific Abstracts
  • CancerLIT
  • CINAHL
  • Current Contents/Clinical Medicine
  • Current Contents/Social and Behavioural Sciences
  • EMBASE/ Excerpta Medica
  • Health Services Abstracts
  • Index Medicus/MEDLINE
  • Ingenta (previously UnCover)
  • Inpharma Weekly (Adis)
  • Journals @ Ovid
  • Nursing & Allied Health (EBSCO)
  • ProQuest (previously University Microfilms)
  • Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal
  • Psychological Abstracts
  • Psychology & Behavioural Science (EBSCO)
  • PsycINFO
  • PsycLIT
  • Reactions Weekly  (ADIS)
  • Research Alert
  • Science Citation Index
  • SciSearch Social Planning/Policy and Development Abstracts
  • Social Sciences Citation Index
  • Social SciSearch
  • Sociological Abstracts
  • Year Book of Psychiatric and Applied Mental Health

Instructions to Authors

The Journal, an official publication of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists, is published six times per year. It accepts submissions, presented as original research, reviews, case reports or correspondence. Editorial comments and book reviews are commissioned by the editor. Manuscripts are accepted on the understanding that they are not under consideration by another publication. Copyright rests with the Journal but neither the Journal nor the College holds itself responsible for statements made by the authors. The Editor reserves the right to modify typescripts to eliminate ambiguity and repetition and improve communication between author and reader. If extensive alterations are required, the manuscript will be returned to the author for revision.

Send manuscripts to:

The Editor
Professor Sidney Bloch
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
Editorial Office
PO Box 378
Carlton, Victoria 3053
Australia.

Fast-tracking
If you think your proposed article justifies 'jumping the queue', please call, fax or email the Editor at the Editorial Office before submitting the manuscript.

Conflict of Interest
Authors should disclose at the time of submission any financial arrangements they might have with a company whose product figures prominently in the submitted manuscript or with a company making a competing product. Such information will be held in confidence while the paper is under review and will not influence the editorial decision but, if the article is accepted for publication, the Editor will usually discuss with the authors the manner in which such information is to be communicated to the reader.

Because the essence of the reviews and editorials is selection and interpretation of literature, the Editor expects that the authors of such articles will not have any financial interest in a company (or its competitor) that makes a product discussed in the article.

Preparation of Manuscripts
All contributions should be written in English and should follow Macquarie Dictionary spelling. All manuscripts apart from letters and book reviews are refereed by two or more assessors. Consequently authors should submit four paper copies: double-spaced, printed on one side of the paper only, leaving wide margins and with pages numbered.

Maximum Lengths
The maximum lengths of articles (including abstract and references) are: 7500 words for review articles; 5000 words for regular articles; 1500 words for case reports. Authors should provide a word count (including abstract and references). These limits may be exceeded in exceptional circumstances, but authors are advised to confer first with the Editorial Office.

Title Page
This should contain the title of the contribution, and the name(s) and address(es) of the author(s),and position titles at their respective institutions/places of employment. Make titles concise, and as precise and specific as possible for abstracting purposes. The full postal address, telephone and facsimile numbers, and Email address (if available) of the author who will receive correspondence and check the proofs should be included, as well as the present address of any author if different from that where the work was carried out. Addresses for authors other than the correspondence author should contain the department, institution, city and country. Position titles of all authors at their respective institutions/places of employment should be included. A short running title (less than 40 characters including spaces) should also be provided.

Structured Abstracts (i.e. Summary)
A summary of the paper must be in the form of a structured abstract using the format below. Please pay particular attention to the abstruct as it is crucial for effective indexing in databases such as Index Medicus/MEDLINE and PsycLIT.. It should be in the region of 300 words for regular and review articles, and 150 words for case reports.

Regular articles
Objective: questions addressed.
Method: design, setting, sample, interventions (if appropriate), chief outcome measures.
Results: main findings.
Conclusions: only those related to results, both positive and negative highlighting limitations as appropriate, and clinical and research implications.
Key words: up to five (see below).

Review articles
Objective: principal aims of the review.
Method: sources of data; criteria for their selection.
Results: main findings.
Conclusions: principal conclusions, and clinical and research implications.
Key words: up to five (see below).

Case reports
Objective: reasons for the case report.
Clinical picture: main clinical features of the case.
Treatment: interventions given.
Outcome: result of intervention.
Conclusions: clinical implications.
Key words: up to five (see below).

Key Words
Up to five key words that will assist indexers in cross-referencing the article should be supplied. Use of the medical subject headings (MeSH) list from Index Medicus would be suitable.

Pejorative Language
Do not use pejorative labels like 'schizophrenics', 'psychotics' and 'neurotics'. Instead refer to 'patients with schizophrenia', etc. Always use the word 'patient' rather than 'client' or 'consumer'.

Abbreviations
Abbreviations should in general be avoided. However, phrases may be abbreviated if their shortened form is widely known and they are used repeatedly (e.g. CNS, CSF, MAOI). When first used in the text, they should be spelt out in full followed by the abbreviation in brackets.

References
In the main text, references should be identified by a number enclosed in square brackets, for example:
'This finding was first reported by Smith [1], although subsequent workers [2-7] have failed to replicate it.'
Number the references in the order in which they occur in the text. However, once a reference is cited, all subsequent citations should refer to the original number.
At the end of the paper, list references in consecutive numerical order, not alphabetically. Unpublished data and personal communications should not be listed as references, but may be referred to in the main text as: [Brown J: unpublished data] or [Smith J: personal communication]. Articles accepted for publication may be placed in the reference list with the phrase '(in press)' inserted after the authors, title, and full name of the journal.
In the reference list, the order of presentation is illustrated below:

For journal articles:
1. Lambert TJR, Davidson R, McLellan GH. Euthyroid hyperthyroxinaemia in acute psychiatric admissions. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 1987; 21:608-614. (DO NOT INCLUDE ISSUE NUMBER.)

For chapters in edited books:
2. Koran LM, Hamburg DA. Psychophysiological endocrine disorders. In: Freedman AM, Kaplan HI, Sadock BJ, eds. Comprehensive textbook of psychiatry. 2nd edn. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1975:1673-1684.

For a whole book:
3. Mendelson G. Psychiatric aspects of personal injury claims. Springfield, Illinois: Charles C. Thomas, 1988. For a chapter in the author's own book: 4. Gelcer E, McCabe AE, Smith-Resnick C. Circularity within the family. In: Milan family therapy. London: Jason Aronson, 1990:57-62.

Please note well:
All journal titles must be quoted in full (no abbreviations); punctuation of the year, volume number and page numbers must be precisely in accordance with the previous examples; no part of any reference is to be underlined. When referring to books, the city in which the book was published and the publisher's name must be stated; the words Company, Co., Limited, Publishers, Pty Ltd, Inc., etc. are, however, not to be included.
Because accepted articles will not be retyped prior to publishing, it is essential that typists conform strictly to this style. Papers with non-conforming reference lists will be returned for retyping which will lead to a delay in publishing.

Tables
Tables should be included on a separate page, numbered with Arabic numerals and accompanied by short titles at the top. Each table must be referred to in the text in consecutive order. Data presented should, in general, not be duplicated in the text or figures. Explanatory matter should be placed in footnotes below the tabular matter and not included in the title. All non-standard abbreviations should also be explained in the footnotes. Footnotes should be indicated by *, +, +, ? Statistical measures such as SD (standard deviation) or SEM (standard error of the mean) should be identified in headings. Vertical rules and horizontal rules between entries should be omitted.

Figures
Line drawings and graphs should be professionally drawn. High contrast photographic copies of the original line drawings, reduced to final journal dimensions (single column 75 mm, double column 158 mm), are preferred. All lettering should be done professionally and should be of adequate size to retain clarity after reduction. Laser printed line figures should be on good quality white paper. If providing line figures on disk, they should be saved as tiff or eps files. Photographs must be sharp, glossy black and white prints.
Figures should be numbered in Arabic and each figure should be identified clearly on the back using a self-adhesive label with its number, name of author(s) and orientation. Do not use ball point pens or paper clips. Titles and detailed explanations should be confined to legends and not included in illustrations. Supply legends for all figures on a separate sheet of paper, not with the illustration. The whole cost of reproducing colour figures will be charged to authors. Authors will be asked to omit figures containing information which can be concisely provided in text form.

Correspondence
Letters are welcome on any subject. Please provide a title and prepare it in the customary Journal format. Please note that the maximum length should not exceed 500 words with no more than five references. (If you have trouble adhering to the length, please contact the Editorial Office.)

Please submit the letter by Email if at all possible, otherwise include a disk with the hard copy.

Manuscripts on disk/email
Once a paper is accepted, authors are required to provide an electronic version of their manuscript. If on disc, authors should use a new disk rather than a reformatted disk and the disk should contain the relevant file(s) only. Authors should supply their accepted paper as formatted text (most word-processing formats can be handled). It is essential that the hardware and the word processing package are specified on the disk (e.g. IBM, Word 7), as well as the first author's surname, the Journal title and the manuscript number.

The entire article - (i) title page, (ii) text, (iii) acknowledgements, (iv) references, (v) figure legends, (vi) tables and legends, (vii) appendices - should be saved in a single file; only electronic figures should be supplied as separate files. The following instructions should be adhered to:

It is essential that the final, revised version of the manuscript and the electronic file are identical. Do not use the carriage return (enter) at the end of lines within a paragraph. Turn the hyphenation option off. Do not use l (ell) for 1 (one), O (upper case oh) for 0 (zero) or ?(German esszett) for ? (beta). Include all figure legends and tables with their legends, if possible. Use a tab, not spaces, to separate data points in tables. If you use a table editor function, ensure that each data point is contained within a unique cell; do not use carriage returns within cells.

On-line Guidelines
Authors might want to visit the Blackwell Science website for authors at http://www.blackwell-science.com/elecmed/authors.htm which details further information on the preparation and submission of articles and figures and gives access to the Blackwell House Style guide.

Proofs and Offprints
Page proofs only will be sent to the author directly from the publisher and they should be returned to the publisher within 3 days of receipt. Alterations to the text and illustrations are unacceptable at proof stage and authors will be charged for changes from their original manuscript.

An offprint order form giving the cost of offprints will be sent to the corresponding author with the proofs. The order and payment should be returned with the corrected proofs within 3 days of receipt. Offprints are sent out within 3 weeks of publication, by surface mail.


Editorial Board

Editor
Sidney Bloch, University of Melbourne, Melbourne

Editorial board
Josephine Beatson (Book Review Editor), University of Melbourne, Australia
David Castle (Correspondence Editor), University of Melbourne, Australia
George Halasz, Monash University, Australia
Edwin Harari, St Vincent’s Hospital, Melbourne, Australia
Carol Harvey, University of Melbourne, Australia
Christos Pantelis, University of Melbourne and Mental Health Research Institute, Melbourne
Michael Salzberg, University of Melbourne, Australia
Simon Stafrace, Caulfield General Medical Centre, Melbourne, Australia
Alison Yung, University of Melbourne, Australia

Australasian advisory board
Bryanne Barnett, Sydney
Philip Boyce, Sydney
Paddy Burges Watson, Hobart
Peter Ellis, Wellington
Ian Hickie, Sydney
Aleksandar Janca, Perth
Brian Kelly, Brisbane
Kenneth Kirkby, Hobart
Sandy McFarlane, Adelaide
Warwick Middleton, Brisbane
Philip Mitchell, Sydney
Roger Mulder, Christchurch
Stephen Rosenman, Canberra
Michael Sawyer, Adelaide
Garry Walter, Sydney

International advisory board
Nancy Andreasen, Iowa City, USA
Jules Angst, Zurich, Switzerland
George Christodoulou, Athens, Greece
Anthony Clare, Dublin, Ireland
Glen Gabbard, Houston, USA
Felice Lieh-Mak, Hong Kong
Eugene Paykel, Cambridge, UK
Norman Sartorius, Geneva, Switzerland
George Szmukler, London, UK
Mingyuan Zhang, Shanghai, China

Former editors
Alan Stoller (1966?969)
Jack Evans (1970?972)
Roger C. Buckle (1973?978)
Gordon Parker (1979?987)
Robert Finlay-Jones (1988?991)

Editorial Correspondence
Papers and other material for publication should be sent to the Editor, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, Editorial Office, PO Box 378, Carlton, Victoria 3053, Australia.



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