期刊名称:SURGICAL PRACTICE
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Surgical Practice is a peer-reviewed quarterly journal, which is dedicated to the art and science of advances in clinical practice and research in surgery. Surgical Practice publishes papers in all fields of surgery and surgery-related disciplines. It consists of sections of history, leading articles, reviews, original papers, discussion papers, education, case reports, short notes on surgical techniques and letters to the Editor.
Indexed / Abstracted in
Academic Search (EBSCO) Academic Search Elite (EBSCO) Academic Search Premier (EBSCO) CSA Biological Sciences Database (CSA/CIG) CSA Environmental Sciences & Pollution Management Database (CSA/CIG) Current Abstracts (EBSCO) EMBASE/Excerpta Medica (Elsevier) Health Source Nursing/Academic (EBSCO) Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition (Thomson ISI) Proquest 5000 (ProQuest) ProQuest Health & Medical Complete (ProQuest) Proquest Research Library (ProQuest) Science Citation Index Expanded (also known as SciSearch®) SCOPUS (Elsevier)
Instructions to Authors
Surgical Practice is the official English language journal of the College of Surgeons of Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Neurological Society, the Hong Kong Society for Coloproctology, the Hong Kong Society of Minimal Access Surgery and the Hong Kong Urological Association and publishes original contributions on all aspects of surgery and surgery related disciplines. Original research articles, reviews, leading articles, discussion papers, history, education, short notes on surgical techniques, case reports and letters to the Editor are published.
Copyright Authors publishing in the Journal will be asked to sign a Exclusive Licence Form. For Multi-media Articles, authors will be asked to sign 2 Exclusive Licence Forms for the Text Description and the Video respectively. In signing the form it is assumed that authors have obtained permission to use any copyrighted or previously published material. All authors must read and agree to the conditions outlined in the form, and must sign the form or agree that the corresponding author can sign on their behalf. Articles cannot be published until a signed form has been received. Authors can download the form from http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/ash_elf.pdf.
Ethical Consideration Authors must state that the protocol for the research project has been approved by a suitably constituted Ethics Committee of the institution within which the work was undertaken and that it conforms to the provisions of the Declaration of Helsinki (as revised in Tokyo 2004), available at http://www.wma.net/policy/b3.htm.
All investigations on human subjects must include a statement that the subject gave informed consent. Patient anonymity should be preserved. Photographs need to be cropped sufficiently to prevent human subjects being recognized (or an eye bar should be used).
Style of Manuscripts All contributions should be written in English. Spelling should follow the Concise Oxford Dictionary. Manuscripts should follow the style of the Vancouver agreement detailed in the 'Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals' as presented at http://www.ICMJE.org/. Manuscripts should be as concise and clear as possible. The editors reserve the right to modify manuscripts to eliminate ambiguity and repetition and improve communication between author and reader.
Units and abbreviations: All measurements should be given in SI or SI-derived units. Statistics and measurements should always be given in figures (e.g. 10mm), except where the number begins a sentence. When a number does not refer to a unit of measurement it is spelt out, except where the number is greater than nine. Standard abbreviations may be used and should be defined in the Abstract and on first mention in the text. In general a term should not be abbreviated unless it is used repeatedly and the abbreviation is helpful to the reader. Avoid abbreviations in the title. Abbreviations such as e.g. and etc. should only be used in parentheses.
Drug names: In general, generic names should be used. Brand names may be inserted in parenthesis.
Manuscripts Manuscripts should be submitted in triplicate (including figures and tables) to:
The Editor, Surgical Practice Editorial Office College of Surgeons of Hong Kong Room 601, 6th Floor Hong Kong Academy of Medicine Building 99 Wong Chuk Hang Road Aberdeen Hong Kong Tel: (+852) 2871 8799 Fax:(+852) 2515 3198 email:i nfo@cshk.org (Fax is for urgent correspondence only, not for submission of manuscripts).
Authors should keep one set of text, tables and illustrations, as the Editors cannot accept responsibility for loss of or damage to manuscripts. Original material will not be returned to the author unless a specific request is made in the covering letter. Manuscripts should be clearly typed in double spacing on one side only of good quality A4 paper (30 × 21 cm). Dot matrix printer quality is unacceptable. Margins of 2.5 cm should be allowed on all sides. The right hand margin of the text should not be justified. Pages should be numbered consecutively in the top right-hand corner, commencing with the title page and including those containing acknowledgements, references, tables and legends to figures. The Editors reserve 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.
Will authors please note that Word 2007 is not yet compatible with journal production systems. Unfortunately, the journal cannot accept Microsoft Word 2007 documents until such time as a stable production version is released. Please use Word's 'Save As' option therefore to save your document as an older (.doc) file type.
Author material archive policy Authors who require the return of any submitted material that is accepted for publication should inform the Editorial Office after acceptance. If no indication is given that author material should be returned, Blackwell Publishing will dispose of all hardcopy and electronic material two months after publication.
Manuscripts on Disk Authors are required to provide their manuscript on disk. 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 file saved on disk are identical (i.e. authors should supply a new disk if the article is revised). 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 ß (German esszett) for ß (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. Complete and return the File Description Form (supplied by the Editorial Office) specifying any special characters used to represent non-keyboard characters.
Blackwell Author Services Authors are encouraged to visit the Blackwell Publishing website for authors which details further information on the preparation and submission of articles and figures and gives access to the Blackwell house style guide.
Conventional \Manuscripts The manuscript should be arranged as follows, with each section beginning on a separate page.
Title page: The title page should include the following, in this order: (1) Title: The title should be concise and informative not exceeding 80 characters and spaces. The main title should, where possible, contain the major key words used in the body of the paper. (2) Running title: A short running title. No longer than 40 characters and spaces, should be provided. (3) Both given and family name of each author (Chinese names if applicable), in full, position and highest academic degree(s) (4) Name of Department(s) and institution(s) to which the work should be attributed, including complete postal address(es) and positions held by authors(s). (5) Corresponding author: The full postal address, telephone and facsimile numbers and Email address of the author who will check the proofs and receive correspondence should be included, as well as the present address of any author if different from where the work was carried out. (6) Sources of support in the form of grants and industry support.
Abstract: All manuscripts require an abstract. For original articles this should be a concise structured abstract of no more than 200 words. It should be factual, not descriptive and structured as follows:
Objective: Why did you start the study? Methodology: The design of the study, its setting, description of subjects, interventions and outcome measures. Results: A summary of the findings with relevant statistical indices. Conclusions: A description of the meaning of the findings, which should be directly supported by the data, with equal emphasis on positive and negative findings. New and important information should be emphasized. Chinese contributors are requested to submit a Chinese language abstract, in addition to the English version, if possible. Keywords: No more than five key words that will assist indexers in cross-referencing the article should be supplied. For reference use the medical subject headings (MeSH) list from MEDLINE. If suitable MeSH terms are not yet available for recently introduced terms, present terms may be used. Main text: This should be divided into the following sections: Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion. Acknowledgements: Should only be made to persons who have made genuine contributions and who endorse the data and conclusions. Acknowledgement of grants or other financial interests should be made here.
Acknowledgments The source of financial grants and other funding should be acknowledged, including a frank declaration of the authors' industrial links and affiliations. Acknowledge individuals who do not qualify as authors but who contributed to the study or manuscript (or state 'none'). Contributions that should be acknowledged include administrative, technical, or material forms of support like writing assistance, literature searching, data analysis, administrative support, supply of materials.
References: Provide a list of references in double spacing after the text. The Vancouver system of referencing must be used. Cite references in numerical order by superscript Arabic numerals according to their first mention in the text. References cited only in tables or in legends to figures should be numbered in accordance with a sequence established by the first identification in the text of the particular table or illustration. Cite unpublished data and personal communications in the text only. In the reference list, abbreviate the titles of journals according to MEDLINE. If the journal is not listed or MEDLINE is unavailable, the title should be written in full. List all authors for each reference when there are six or fewer; when there are more than six, list only the first three followed by et.al. Examples of correct reference format:
Journal articles 1. Marasco S, Woods S. The risk of eye splash injuries in surgery. Aust. NZ J.Surg. 1998; 68: 785-787.
Books 2. Yates DW, Moulton C, Redmund A. Lecture Notes on Emergency Medicine, 2nd edn. Oxford: Blackwell Science, 1997. Articles of
Chapters in books 3. Deane SA. Principles of trauma management. In: Clunie, GJA, Tjandra, JJ, Francis, DMA, eds. Textbook of Surgery. Melbourne: Blackwell Science, 1997; 436-447.
Electronic material 4. American Urological Association [Internet]. Male Infertility Best Policy Committee. Report on varicocele and infertility. Linthicum, MD: AmericanUrological Association; available from URL: http://www.auanet.org.
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 s.d. (standard deviation) or s.e.m. (standard error of the mean) should be identified in headings. Vertical rules and horizontal rules between entries should be omitted. If a table or an illustration has been reproduced from a published work, the source must be given in full, with permission having been granted by the author and by the publisher.
Figure legends: All illustrations require self-explanatory legends, typed on a separate sheet and double spaced. When symbols, arrows and numbers or letters are used to identify parts of illustrations, each one should be identified and explained in the legend (not in the figure). All illustrations are classified as figures and should be numbered with Arabic numerals in the order in which they are referred to in the text.
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 86 mm, double column 168mm), 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. Photographs must be sharp, glossy black and white prints. Photomicrographs should have internal scale markers. If photographs of patients are used, either the subjects should not be identifiable or their pictures must be accompanied by written permission for their use. 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 ballpoint 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.
Case reports: English abstracts for case reports should be less than 200 words. A maximum of five references and one figure or table is permitted. The main text should not exceed 1200 words without any figures or tables, or 800 words with a figure or table.
Multi-media manuscripts : Text description should be in English, concisely structured with no more than 600 words and 5 references. An abstract and keywords are not required for this manuscript type. Author is required to provide a 3-minute video on DVD in AVI format together with a short text description. Videos about surgical technique and interesting visual image findings are acceptable. The size of the video should not exceed 5 MB. The DVD should contain the relevant file(s) only. It is essential that the first author's surname and the manuscript title are specified on the DVD.
Proofs and offprints: Page proofs will be sent to the corresponding author and should be returned to Blackwell Medcom within three days of receipt. Alterations should be limited to correction of typographical errors. The cost of excessive alterations will be charged to the author(s). Authors may order offprints on the appropriate form sent with the page proofs.
Editorial Board
Chairman Samuel PY Kwok
Editor-in-Chie Paul BS Lai
Editors Miranda KY Chan David TY Lam WL Law Simon SM Ng
Members Angus CW Chan SK Chu (HK Urological Association)* SC Sydney Chung Dawson TS Fong KN Hung (HK Neurosurgical Society)* James ST Hwang Walter WK King CK Kong (HK Soc. Minimal Access Surgery)* WY Lau Simon YK Law (CME/CPD Committee Chairman, The College of Surgeons of Hong Kong) HT Leong Arthur KC Li Michael KW Li CM Man Willam CS Meng (HKSoc. Coloproctology)* WT Ng WS Poon WT Siu (HK Soc. Minimal Access Surgery)* Paul KH Tam CK Wong (HK Neurological Society)* Kevin KK Yau (HK Neurosurgical Society)* MK Yiu (HK Urological Association)* CK Yeung Andrew WC Yip *Representing the Society.
International Advisory Board Leslie H Blumgart, USA J Puig La Calle, Spain Willard E Fee, USA John Fung, USA Ian Gough, Australia Jie Fu Huang, China Yong Xiong Liu, China Naofumi Nagasue, Japan Yuji Nimura, Japan Takeshi Sano, Japan Mitsuru Sasako, Japan Claude H Organ, USA Takeshi Sano, Japan Mitsuru Sasako, Japan Lewis Spitz, UK Walter TL Tan, Singapore Norman S Williams, UK Robin CN Williamson, UK Meng Chao Wu, China Tatsuo Yamakawa, Japan
Editorial Assistant Kura Lo
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