期刊名称:JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
This journal seeks articles related to the economics of health and medical care. Its scope will include the following topics:
.production of health and health services;
.demand and utilization of health services;
.financing of health services;
.measurement of health;
.behavioral models of demanders, suppliers and other health care agencies;
. manpower planning and forecasting;
.the prevention of sickness;
.cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analyses and issues of budgeting;
.efficiency and distributional aspects of health policy;
.and such other topics as the Editors may deem appropriate. Applications to problems in both developed and less-developed countries are welcomed
Instructions to Authors
1) Papers must be in English.
(2) Papers for publication should be sent in quadruplicate to either the Editor or the Co-Editor.
For all US submissions:
Professor J.P. Newhouse Division of Health Policy Research and Education Harvard University 180 Longwood Avenue Boston, MA 02115-5899
For all other submissions (outside of USA):
Professor A.J. Culyer Department of Economics and Related Studies University of York Heslington York, YO10 5DD UK
Submission of a paper will be held to imply that it contains original unpublished work and is not being submitted for publication elsewhere. The Editor does not accept responsibility for damage or loss of papers submitted. Upon acceptance of an article, author(s) will be asked to transfer copyright of the article to the publisher. This transfer will ensure the widest possible dissemination of information.
(3) Submission of accepted papers as electronic manuscripts, i.e., on disk with accompanying manuscript, is encouraged. Electronic manuscripts have the advantage that there is no need for rekeying of text, thereby avoiding the possibility of introducing errors and resulting in reliable and fast delivery of proofs. The preferred storage medium is a 5.25 or 3.5 inch disk in MS-DOS format, although other systems are welcome, e.g., Macintosh (in this case, save your file in the usual manner; do not use the option 'save in MS-DOS format"). Do not submit your original paper as electronic manuscript but hold on to disk until asked for this by the Editor (in case your paper is accepted without revisions). Do submit the accepted version of your paper as electronic manuscript. Make absolutely sure that the file on the disk and the printout are identical. Please use a new and correctly formatted disk and label this with your name; also specify the software and hardware used as well as the title of the file to be processed. Do not convert the file to plain ASCII. Ensure that the letter 'l' and digit '1', and also the letter 'O' and digit '0' are used properly, and format your article (tabs, indents, etc.) consistently. Characters not available on your word processor (Greek letters mathematical symbols, etc.) should not be left open but indicated by a unique code (e.g. gralpha, , @, etc., for the Greek letter ). Such codes should be used consistently throughout the entire text; a list of codes used should accompany the electronic manuscript. Do not allow your word processor to introduce word breaks and do not use a justified layout. Please adhere strictly to the general instructions below on style, arrangement and, in particular, the reference style of the journal.
(4) Manuscripts should be double spaced, with wide margins, and printed on one side of the paper only. All pages should be numbered consecutively. Titles and subtitles should be short. References, tables, and legends for the figures should be printed on separate pages.
(5) The first page of the manuscript should contain the following information: (i) the title; (ii) the name(s) and institutional affiliation(s) of the author(s); (iii) an abstract of not more than 100 words. A footnote on the same sheet should give the name, address, and telephone and fax numbers of the corresponding author [as well as an e-mail address].
(6) The first page of the manuscript should also contain at least one classification code according to the Classification System for Journal Articles as used by the Journal of Economic Literature; in addition, up to five key words should be supplied.
(7) Acknowledgements and information on grants received can be given in a first footnote, which should not be included in the consecutive numbering of footnotes.
(8) Footnotes should be kept to a minimum and numbered consecutively throughout the text with superscript Arabic numerals.
(9) Displayed formulae should be numbered consecutively throughout the manuscript as (1), (2), etc. against the right-hand margin of the page. In cases where the derivation of formulae has been abbreviated, it is of great help to the referees if the full derivation can be presented on a separate sheet (not to be published).
(10) References to publications should be as follows:
'Smith (1992) reported that...' or 'This problem has been studied previously (e.g., Smith et al., 1969)'.
The author should make sure that there is a strict one-to-one correspondence between the names and years in the text and those on the list. The list of references should appear at the end of the main text (after any appendices, but before tables and legends for figures). It should be double spaced and listed in alphabetical order by author's name.
References should appear as follows:
For monographs Hawawini, G., Swary, I., 1990. Mergers and Acquisitions in the U.S. Banking Industry: Evidence from the Capital Markets. North-Holland, Amsterdam.
For contributions to collective works Brunner, K., Meltzer, A.H., 1990. Money supply, in: Friedman, B.M., Hahn, F.H. (Eds.), Handbook of Monetary Economics, Vol. 1. North-Holland, Amsterdam, pp. 357--396.
For periodicals Griffiths, W., Judge, G., 1992. Testing and estimating location vectors when the error covariance matrix is unknown. Journal of Econometrics 54, 121--138.
Note that journal titles should not be abbreviated.
(11) Illustrations will be reproduced photographically from originals supplied by the author; they will not be redrawn by the publisher. Please provide all illustrations in quadruplicate (one high-contrastoriginal and three photocopies). Care should be taken that lettering and symbols are of a comparable size. The illustrations should not be inserted in the text, and should be marked on the back with figure number, title of paper, and author's name. All graphs and diagrams should be referred to as figures, and should be numbered consecutively in the text in Arabic numerals. Illustration for papers submitted as electronic manuscripts should be in traditional form.
(12) Tables should be numbered consecutively in the text in Arabic numerals and printed on separate sheets.
Any manuscript which does not conform to the above instructions may be returned for the necessary revision before publication.
(13) Page proofs will be sent to the corresponding author. Proofs should be corrected carefully; the responsibility for detecting errors lies with the author. Corrections should be restricted to instances in which the proof is at variance with the manuscript. No deviations from the version accepted by the Editors are permissible without the prior and explicit approval by the Editors; these alterations will be charged. Fifty reprints of each paper are supplied free of charge to the corresponding author; additional reprints are available at cost if they are ordered when the proof is returned.
Editorial Board
Editor:
J.P. Newhouse, Division of Health Policy Research and Education, Harvard University, 180 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115-5899, USA R. Frank, Harvard University, Boston, MA, USA
Co-Editors:
K. Claxton, Department of Economics and Related Studies, University of York, Heslington, York YO10 5DD, UK A.J. Culyer, Department of Economics and Related Studies, University of York, Heslington, York YO10 5DD, UK D. Cutler, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA T. McGuire, Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
Associate Editors:
H. Aaron, The Brookings Institution, Washington DC, USA H. Bleichrodt, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands J. Currie, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA P.M. Danzon, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA E.Van Doorslaer, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands D. Dranove, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA R.P. Ellis, Boston University, MA, USA R.G. Evans, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada R. Frank, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA J.-M. Graf von der Schulenburg, University of Hanover, Germany M. Grossman, National Bureau of Economic Research, New York, NY, USA J. Gruber, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA M. Johannesson, Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden A.M. Jones, University of York, UK B. Jonsson, Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden W.G. Manning, The University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Avenue, MC 2007, USA M. McClellan, Stanford University, CA, USA C.E. Phelps, University of Rochester, NY, USA C. Propper, Bristol University, UK J. Richardson, Monash University, Clayton, Australia G.L. Stoddart, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada A. Wagstaff, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK
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