期刊名称:JOURNAL OF CHILD HEALTH CARE
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal

Journal of Child Health Care is a professionally focused, peer reviewed journal which addresses child health issues from a multi-disciplinary perspective It fosters critical understanding of the neonate, child and adolescent in health and illness.
"Journal of Child Health Care has striven since its inception to bring higher standards to the application of child health theory to practice. It gets better and better, and I am please to see that its status is now reflected by a high quality publisher - Sage." - Steve Campbell Professor of Nursing Practice, University of Northumbria, Head of Nursing Research and Development, City Hospitals Sunderland NHS Trust
"This is an easy to read journal which provides good evidence based child care. It covers a range of topical nursing subjects encouraging skill and knowledge development. As such we use it as recommended reading for students. The on line access is perfect for tutors too." - Maureen Horgan Liverpool John Moores University
"A welcome international journal presenting a wide range of topics of concern to pediatric nurses worldwide. Manuscripts include content along the continuum of care including primary, acute and home care. Given our increasing globalization, this journal will also foster increased understanding of the wide diversity among children and their families." - Jane H Barnsteiner University of Pennsylvania
Electronic Access:
Journal of Child Health Care is available electronically on SAGE Journals Online at http://chc.sagepub.com
Abstracting/Indexing in:
Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature CINAHL
Current Contents / Clinical Medicine
Current Contents/ Social and Behavioral Sciences
Family Index
Family Studies Abstracts
Index Medicus & MEDLINE
Journal Citation Reports Social Sciences
Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts
PsycINFO
Science Citation Index Expanded
Social Sciences Citation Index
Social Services Abstracts
Sociological Abstracts
Studies on Women & Gender Abstracts
Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
Instructions to Authors
All submissions should be made online at the CHC SAGETRACK website
Access CHC SAGETRACK
Please log onto the website. If you are a new user, you will first need to create an account. This is a three-step system that takes a matter of minutes to set up. Log-in information is sent via email immediately upon completion. Full instructions for uploading the manuscript are provided on the website. If you have already created an account but have forgotten your details type your email address in the 'Password Help' to receive an emailed reminder.
Submissions should be made via the Author Center and the 'Click here to Submit a New Manuscript' option. For questions and a user guide, please use the 'Get Help Now' button at the top right of every screen. Further help is available through ScholarOne's® Manuscript CentralTM customer support at +1 434-817-2040 x 167. If you would like to discuss your paper prior to submission, please contact the Editor, Bernie Carter, at the following email address: bcarter@uclan.ac.uk
Please ensure that your Microsoft Word or RTF document does NOT include a title page, an abstract, or page numbers; the JCHC SAGETRACK system will generate them for you, and then convert your manuscript to PDF for peer review. Furthermore, it is imperative that authors remove from their submissions any information that will identify them or their affiliations to reviewers. All correspondence, including notification of the Editor's decision and requests for revisions, will be by email.
Revisions
Authors submitting revised manuscripts should follow the instructions above to submit through the SAGETRACK system. However, if the first versions were submitted prior to SAGETRACK, the system will not know automatically about the previous version. In such cases, authors should check the 'Has this manuscript been submitted previously?' box and give the previous manuscript number in the space below. (If the previous version was submitted through the SAGETRACK system, following the instructions to submit a revised manuscript will automatically associate your revised version with the original submission) Authors of all revised submissions should when prompted provide information explaining the changes in your manuscript. As this will be provided to reviewers it is important that authors do not identify themselves in these responses.
Peer Review Policy
Journal of Child Health Care operates a strictly blinded peer review process in which the reviewer’s name is withheld from the author and, the author’s name from the reviewer. The reviewer may at their own discretion opt to reveal their name to the author in their review but our standard policy practice is for both identities to remain concealed.
Peer Review Process: Each manuscript is reviewed by at least two referees. All manuscripts are reviewed as rapidly as possible, and an editorial decision is generally reached within (eg) 4-6 weeks of submission
Decisions on manuscripts will be taken as rapidly as possible. Authors should expect to have reviewer’s comments within approximately (eg) 6 weeks. In general, Editors will seek advice from two or more expert reviewers about the scientific content and presentation of submitted articles.
All manuscripts are reviewed initially by the Editors and only those papers that meet the scientific and editorial standards of the journal, and fit within the aims and scope of the journal, will be sent for outside review.
General guidelines
1. Each paper submitted, if considered suitable by the Editor, will be refereed by at least two anonymous referees. The editor may recommend revision and re-submission.
2. Length of papers. Manuscripts should ideally be between 3000 and 3500 words long. Abstracts should be between 100 and 150 words.
3. In order to protect the identity of children, families and staff, authors should use pseudonyms and remove any information leading to identification of any of the individuals described in the study.
4. Quotations. Lengthy quotations (over 40 words) should be displayed and indented in the text.
5. American or UK spellings may be used. Dates should be in the form `9 May 2006'. Delete points from 'USA' and other such abbreviations.
6. Tables. Each table needs a short descriptive title above it. Column headings should clearly define the data presented. If necessary, suitably identified footnotes should be included below. Take care to include all the units of measurement. The table needs to be cited in the text.
7. Figures. Line drawings should be presented as EPS files (all fonts embedded) or TIFF files. Resolution should be 800dpi, and only black-and-white figures are published.
8. References in the text should be presented in the Harvard system, namely the author's name and year of publication in brackets, together with the page numbers. For example `As Booth (1994, pp. 22-23) has observed …', or, in a more general reference: `Booth (1994) appears to be saying...'.
9. Reference list. The references should be listed alphabetically in full at the end of the paper, typed double spaced for ease of editing, in the following style:
Benton DC (1990) Reviewing the literature. In: Cormac DFS (ed.) The Research Process in Nursing. Oxford: Blackwell, 174-194.
Mayall B (1996) Children, Health and Social Order. Milton Keynes: Open University Press.
Walker S (1999) Child mental health: Promoting prevention. Journal of Child Health Care 3(4): 12-16.
Huth EJ, King K and Lock S (1988) Uniform requirements for manuscripts submitted to biomedical journals. British Medical Journal 00: 1-4 (accessed 7 October 2009).
National Center for Professional Certification. (2002) Factors Affecting Organizational Climate and Retention. Available at: www.cwla.org./programmes/triechmann/2002fbwfiles
Clark JM and Smith B (2001) Referencing style for journals. Unpublished doctoral thesis, University of Leicester, Leicester.
Clark JM (2006) Referencing style for journals. The Independent, 21 May, p.10.
In multi-authored articles, the names of all authors should be given in the reference list. In the text, if there are more than two names, please give the first name and et al..
10. Language and terminology. Jargon or unnecessary technical language should be avoided, as should the use of abbreviations (such as coded names for conditions). Language that might be deemed sexist or racist should be avoided.
11. Abbreviations. As far as possible, please avoid the use of initials, except for terms in common use. Please provide a list, in alphabetical order, of abbreviations used, and spell them out (with the abbreviations in brackets) the first time they are mentioned in the text.
13. The corresponding author will be sent proofs for checking and correction. He or she will be given controlled access to a PDF of their article and a complimentary copy (per author) of the issue after publication.
Books for review should be sent to the attention of Joan Simons, Book Reviews Editor, Thames Valley University, Wellington Street, Slough, SL1 1YG, UK. Email: Joan.Simons@tvu.ac.uk
English Language Editing Services: Please click here for information on professional English language editing services recommended by SAGE.
Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief:
Professor Bernie Carter
University of Central Lancashire, UK
Associate Editor:
Prof Jean B. Ivey
University of Alabama, USA
Helen Langton
University of Derby, UK
Reviews Editor:
Joan Simons
Thames Valley University, UK
Editorial Committee:
Jan Colson
University of Bedfordshire, UK
Judith Ellis
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, UK
Bob Gates
NHS South Central, UK
Helen Lewer
UK
Kevin Power
De Montfort University, UK
Jean Robinson
Barts & The London Hospital Trust, London, UK
International Editorial Board:
Jane Barnsteiner
University of Pennsylvania, USA
Lucy Bray
Royal Liverpool Children's Hospital, UK
Prof Marion E Broome
University of Wisconsin,
Franco A. Carnevale
McGill University, Canada
Philip Darbyshire
Women's and Children's Hospital, North Adelaide, Australia
Odontuya Davaasuren
Health Sciences University of Mongolia, Mongolia
Annette Dickinson
Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand
Judith Ellis
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, UK
Margaret Fletcher
Bristol Royal Children's Hospital, UK
May Sin-mai Fok
Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Ulla Forinder
Stockholm University and Karolinska University Hospital
Linda Franck
King's College London, UK
Regina AparecidaGarcia de Lima
University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
Gwen Garner
Action for Sick Children, Glasgow, Scotland
Inger Hallstrvm
Lund University, Sweden
Lucia Endang Hartati
Akademi Keperawatan, Indonesia
Prof Jean B. Ivey
University of Alabama, USA
Prof Debra Jackson
University of Western Sydney, Australia
Pat Jackson Allen
Yale Univeristy, USA
Anna Karani
University of Nairobi, Kenya
Susanne Hwiid Klausen
Rigshospitalet, Denmark
Dr Gudrun Kristjansdottir
Hjzkrunarfrfdideild, Hasksla Islands, Iceland
Jos Latour
Sophia Children's Hospital, The Netherlands
Kudakwashe Godwill Mapanga
University of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe
Heather Mohay
Queensland University of Technology, Australia
Sue Nagy
The New Children's Hospital, Australia
Louise Newman
NSW Institute of Psychiatry, NSW, Australia
Neil Pakenham-Walsh
Global Healthcare Information Network, UK
Kevin Power
De Montfort University, UK
Duncan Randall
University of Birmingham, UK
Linda M. Richter
CYFSD Human Sciences Research Council, South Africa
Fanny Robichaud
University of Quebec in Outaouais, Canada
Christina Rosmus
The Montreal Children's Hospital, Canada
Birgitta Sanden Eriksson
Stockholm University, Sweden
Sheila Santacroce
Yale University, USA
Linda Shields
Curtin University of Technology, Australia
Elizabeth Stenhouse
University of Plymouth, UK
Maja Svderbdck
Mdlardalen University, Sweden
Eric Storch
University of Florida, USA
Sutthiluck Tungulboriboon
Khon Kaen University, Thailand
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