期刊名称:BIRTH-ISSUES IN PERINATAL 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
Edited by: Diony Young
ISI Journal Citation Reports?Ranking: 2004: 1/33 (Nursing (Science)); 1/32 (Nursing (Soc Sci)); 14/55 (Obstetrics & Gynecology); 11/70 (Pe Impact Factor: 1.981
Birth: Issues in Perinatal Care is a multidisciplinary, refereed journal devoted to issues and practices in the care of childbearing women, infants, and families. It is written by and for professionals in maternal and neonatal health, nurses, midwives, physicians, public health workers, doulas, psychologists, social scientists, childbirth educators, lactation counselors, epidemiologists, and other health caregivers and policymakers in perinatal care.
The aims of Birth are:
- To publish well-designed, original research in pregnancy and childbirth, from the latest advances in medicine to parents' physical and emotional needs
- To publish comprehensive reviews on topics of major importance in maternal and newborn health
- To provide a timely and lively forum for current issues in maternal and newborn care and education
- To underline the importance of evidence-based medicine in making effective changes in clinical practices
Highlights |
|
Effects of Maternal Characteristics on Cesarean Delivery Rates among U.S. Department of Defense Healthcare Beneficiaries, 1996-2002 Andrea Linton, MS, Michael R. Peterson, DVM, DrPH, and Thomas Williams, PhD
Preference-Based Approaches to Measuring the Benefits of Perinatal Care Stavros Petrou, BSc, MPhil, PhD, and Jane Henderson, BSc, MSc
Childbirth Preferences after Cesarean Birth: A Review of the Evidence Karen B. Eden, PhD, Jason N. Hashima, MD, MPH, Patricia Osterweil, BS, Peggy Nygren, MA, and Jeanne-Marie Guise, MD, MPH
Feeling in Control During Labor: Concepts, Correlates, and Consequences Josephine M. Green, BA(Hons), PhD, AFBPsS, CPsychol, Helen A. Baston, BA(Hons), RN, RM, ADM, MMedSci, PGDipEd
Considering a Simple Strategy for Detection of Women at Risk of Psychological Distress after Childbirth Catherine des Rivi?/SPAN>res-Pigeon, PhD, Marie-Jos?/SPAN>phe Saurel-Cubizolles, PhD, and Nathalie Lelong, MSc
Do Perceived Attitudes of Physicians and Hospital Staff Affect Breastfeeding Decisions? Ann M. DiGirolamo, PhD, MPH, Laurence M. Grummer-Strawn, PhD, and Sara B. Fein, PhD
Indexed/Abstracted in |
|
A S S I A Net (Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts)
Abstracts on Hygiene and Communicable Diseases
British Nursing Index
Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature (1981)
Current Contents
Dairy Science Abstracts
Excerpta Medica. Abstract Journals
Family Index
Global Health
Index Medicus
Inpharma Weekly
International Nursing Index
MEDLINE
Nutrition Abstracts and Reviews
Nutrition Research Newsletter
Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes News
Psychological Abstracts (2001-)
PsycINFO (2001-)
Reactions Weekly
Referativnyi Zhurnal
Rural Development Abstracts
Scopus
Social Sciences Citation Index
Tropical Diseases Bulletin | |
Instructions to Authors
Birth: Issues in Perinatal Care is in its 31st year of publication. It is an editorially independent, interdisciplinary journal published quarterly by Blackwell Publishing, Inc. Birth publishes original, peer-reviewed research and review papers on clinical practice in the fields of perinatal medicine, perinatal nursing, and the social sciences.
Birth is ranked as the #1 nursing journal worldwide (of 32 in that category), according to the most recent edition of the Journal Citation Reports from the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI).* The Journal is also highly ranked in the categories of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Pediatrics. The ISI tracks and compares scholarly journals worldwide.
Readers and subscribers of Birth are nurses in obstetrics, public health, and neonatology; midwives; physicians; childbirth educators; lactation counselors; doulas; psychologists; social scientists; epidemiologists; and other health workers and policymakers in perinatal care.
Author Responsibility Although the publisher and Editorial Board endeavor to ensure that no inaccurate or misleading statements, data, or opinions appear in Birth, it is their policy that all material published in the articles and advertisements is the sole responsibility of the contributor or advertiser concerned. Therefore, the publisher, editors, and their respective employees, officers, and agents accept no responsibility or liability for the consequences of any such inaccurate or misleading statements, data, or opinions.
Submission Requirements A paper is considered for publication on the understanding that it has been submitted solely to Birth and is not being considered for publication elsewhere. A paper presented at a scientific meeting may be considered if it has not been published in full in a proceedings or similar publication. Authors have a responsibility to inform the Editor about potential conflicts of interest and to send to the Editor any previous reports that might be regarded as prior or duplicate publications of the same data.
Authors will be required to assign copyright in their papers. Copyright assignment is a condition of publication and papers will not be passed to the publisher for production unless copyright has been assigned. An appropriate copyright assignment form can be found at the following address: Birth Copyright Assignment Form.
On submission, papers are reviewed by two or more members of the Editorial Board of Birth and/or by outside experts in the field. Reviewers' comments are sent to the primary author with suggestions for revision as needed. Reviews take from 6 to 10 weeks. A double-blind process is used for reviewing submissions. Authors are expected to provide final revised versions of articles on electronic disk, formatted in, or compatible with, Word for Windows, version 6.0 or higher (preferred). Accepted articles will be edited for journal style and language.
The manuscript format is as follows:
- Authors should submit papers to the Editor in triplicate of 8 to 10, typed, double-spaced pages (including references), with consecutive, numbered, parenthetical references in the text that refer to numbered references at the end of the paper.
- The title page contains the author name(s) and degree(s) and a 30- to 50-word statement of current author affiliations and, if appropriate, the institution, identifying numbers, and locations of grants supporting the work.
- The second page contains a concise abstract, in a structured format for research and review papers, with internal headings of Background (includes objective), Method(s), Results, and Conclusions.
- Tables should be double-spaced, with no internal vertical rules, and placed on separate pages at the end of the article. Tables should be in Microsoft Word format.
- Photographs should be black-and-white glossy prints with the primary author's name and placement instructions indicated on the back.
- Authors must attribute all quotations or borrowed material to author and source and obtain written permission to use this material from the copyright holder.
- References must be complete and in the following style:
- Lieberman E, Lang J, Richardson DK, et al. Intrapartum maternal fever and neonatal outcome. Pediatrics 2000;105(1):8-13.
Goldenberg RL, Rouse DJ. Interventions to prevent prematurity. In: McCormick MC, Siegel JE, eds. Prenatal Care: Effectiveness and Implementation. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999:105-138.
Editorial Board
Editor
Diony Young 31 Stuyvesant Mnr. Geneseo, NY 14454 USA Tel/Fax: 585-243-0087
Tel/Fax: +1 (585) 243-0087
Editor Emeritus: Madeleine H. Shearer
Editorial Board
Leah Albers, CNM, DrPH, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA Beverley Chalmers, PhD, DSc(Med), Kingston, Ontario, Canada Linda Chaudron, MD, MS, Rochester, New York, USA Eve R. Colson, MD, New Haven, Connecticut, USA Sarah Danner, CPNP, CNM, Hot Springs, South Dakota, USA Murray W. Enkin, MD, FRCS(C), Toronto, Ontario, Canada Bruce L. Flamm, MD, Riverside, California, USA Jo Garcia, BA, MSc, London, United Kingdom J. Christopher Glantz, MD, MPH, Rochester, New York, USA Robert L. Goldenberg, MD, Birmingham, Alabama, USA Josephine Green, PhD, Leeds, United Kingdom Philip Hall, MD, BScMed, FRCSC, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada Elina Hemminki, MD, Helsinki, Finland David P. Hopkins, MD, MPH, Portland, Oregon, USA Cynthia R. Howard, MD, MPH, Rochester, New York, USA Karyn Kaufman, RM, DrPH, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada Marc J.N.C. Keirse, MD, DPhil, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia Russell S. Kirby, PhD, MS, Birmingham, Alabama, USA Marshall H. Klaus, MD, Berkeley, California, USA Michael Klein, MD, CCFP, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada Ruth A. Lawrence, MD, Rochester, New York, USA Ellice Lieberman, MD, DrPH, Boston, Massachusetts, USA M. Kay Libbus, DrPH, RN, Columbia, Missouri, USA Judith Lumley, PhD, Carlton, Victoria, Australia Rona McCandlish, MScEpid, RM, RGN, Southampton, United Kingdom Margaret Matlin, PhD, Geneseo, New York, USA Fay Menacker, DrPH, RN, Hyattsville, Maryland, USA Patricia D. Mullen, DrPH, Houston, Texas, USA Judy Norsigian, Boston, Massachusetts, USA M.P.M. Richards, PhD, Cambridge, United Kingdom Judith P. Rooks, CNM, MPH, Portland, Oregon, USA Elizabeth Shearer, MEd, MPH, Boston, Massachusetts, USA Pamela Shrock, RPT, PhD, Roslyn Harbor, New York, USA Penny Simkin, PT, Seattle, Washington, USA Ruth T. Wilf, CNM, PhD, Narbeth, Pennsylvania, USA
|