期刊名称:HEALTH INFORMATION AND LIBRARIES JOURNAL
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal Aims and Scope
Health Information and Libraries Journal (HILJ) provides an international and interdisciplinary forum for practitioners, researchers, and students in the library and health professions. Its objectives are to encourage discussion and to disseminate developments at the frontiers of information management and libraries. A major focus is communicating practices that are evidence based both in managing information and in supporting health care.
The editors welcome Original Articles on projects and research, Review or state-of-the-art papers, and Brief Communications on practice, studies under way, or the development of new resources and services. 'HILJ' is the official journal of the Health Libraries Group of the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals and incorporates the Group's Newsletter.
The scope of the journal encompasses (but is not restricted to):
- identifying health information needs and uses
- managing programmes and services in the changing health environment
- information technology and applications in health
- educating and training health information professionals
- outreach to health user groups
Instructions to Authors
Author Guidelines
1. GENERAL
Health Information and Libraries Journal (HILJ) provides an international and interdisciplinary forum for practitioners, researchers, and students in the library and health professions. Its objectives are to encourage discussion and to disseminate developments at the frontiers of information management libraries. A major focus is communicating practices that are evidence based both in managing and in supporting health care.
The Editor welcomes Original Articles on projects and research, Review or state-of-the-art papers, studies under way or the development of new resources and services. HILJ is the official journal of the Health Libraries Group of the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals. The scope of the journal encompasses (but is not restricted to):
- identifying health information needs and uses - managing programmes and services in the changing health environment - information technology and applications in health - educating and training health information professionals - outreach to health user groups
From time to time the Editor may decide that a particular issue should be devoted to a single theme or topic. Guest editors will be asked to solicit a range of papers relating to that theme or topic. Guidelines for guest editors are available from the Editor.
Please read the instructions below carefully for details on the submission of manuscripts, the journal's requirements and standards as well as information concerning the procedure after a manuscript has been accepted for publication in http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/hir. Authors are encouraged to visit http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor/ for further information on the preparation and submission of articles and figures.
2. ETHICAL GUIDELINES
Health Information and Libraries Journal adheres to the below ethical guidlines for publication and research.
2.1 Authorship and Acknowledgements
Authorship: Authors submitting a paper do so on the understanding that the manuscript has been read and approved by all authors and that all authors agree to the submission of the manuscript to the Journal. ALL names authors must have made an active contribution to the conception and design and/or analysis and interpretation of the data and/or the drafting of the paper and ALL must have critically reviewed its content and have approved the final version submitted for publication. Participation solely in the acquisition of funding or the collection of data does not justify authorship.
It is a requirement that all authors have been accredited as appropriate upon submission of the manuscript. Contributors who do not qualify as authors should be mentioned under Acknowledgements.
Acknowledgements: Under Acknowledgements please specify contributors to the article other than the authors accredited. Please also include specifications of the source of funding for the study and any potential conflict of interests if appropriate. Suppliers of materials should be named and their location (town, state/county, country) included.
2.2 Conflict of Interest and Source of Funding
Conflict of Interest: Authors are required to disclose any possible conflict of interest. These include financial (for example patent, ownership, stock ownership, consultancies, speaker's fee). Author's conflict of interest (or information specifying the absence of conflicts of interest) will be published under a separate heading.
The Health Information and Libraries Journal requires that sources of institutional, private and corporate financial support for the work within the manuscript must be fully acknowledged, and any potential conflicts of interest noted. As of 1st March 2007, this information will be a requirement for all manuscripts submitted to the Journal and will be published in a highlighted box on the title page of the article. Please include this information under the separate headings of "Source of Funding" and "Conflict of Interest" at the end of your manuscript.
If the author does not include a conflict of interest statement in the manuscript then the following statement will be included by default: "No conflicts of interest have been declared".
Source of Funding: Authors are required to specify the source of funding for their research when submitting a paper. Suppliers of materials should be named and their location (town, state/county, country) included. The information will be disclosed in the published article.
2.3 Appeal of Decision
The decision on a paper is final and cannot be appealed.
2.4 Permissions
If all or parts of previously published illustrations are used, permission must be obtained from the copyright holder concerned. It is the author's responsibility to obtain these in writing and provide copies to the Publishers.
2.5 Copyright Assignment
Submission of a paper to Health Information and Libraries Journal will be taken to imply that it presents original, unpublished work, not under consideration for publication elsewhere. By submitting a manuscript, the authors agree that the copyright for their article is transferred to the Journal if and when the article is submitted for publication. The copyright covers the exclusive rights to reproduce and distribute the article in any medium, including reprints, photographic reproductions, microfilm, electronic reproductions or any other reproduction of a similar nature, and translations. Permission to publish illustrations must be obtained by the author before submission and any acknowledgements should be included in the captions. It is a condition of publication that authors grant Blackwell Publishing the exclusive licence to publish all articles including abstracts. Papers will not be passed to the publisher for production unless the exclusive licence to publish has been granted. To assist authors an exclusive licence form is available from the editorial office or by clicking here.
Accepted manuscripts, disks, tables and figures will not be returned to authors, and may not be published elsewhere without written permission from Blackwells Publishing. Special copyright queries should be addressed to the Editor. The Blackwell Publishing logo is a trade mark of Blackwell Publishing. registered at the United Kingdom Trade Marks Registry.
3. SUBMISSION OF MANUSCRIPTS
Manuscripts should be submitted ectronically via the online submission site http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/hilj The use of an online submission and peer review site enables immediate distribution of manuscripts and consequentially speeds up the review process. It also allows authors to track the status of their own manuscripts. Complete instructions for submitting a paper are available online and below. Each page of the Manuscript Central website has a 'Get Help Now' icon connecting directly to the online support system at http://mcv3support.custhelp.com. Telephone support is available 24 hours a day, 5 days a week through the US ScholaeOne Support office on +1 434 817 2040 ext. 167. If you do not have internet access or cannot submit online, the Editorial Office can assist. Please telephone +44 (0) 1865 476540, or email: Abigail.Turner@wiley.com.
3.1 Getting Started
1. Launch your web browser (Internet Explorer 5 or higher, Netscape 7 or higher, Firefox 1.0.4 or Safari 1.2.4) and go to the Health Information and Libraries Journal Manuscript Central homepage (http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/hilj). 2. Log-in or click the "Create Account" option if you are a first-time user of Manuscript Central. 3. If you are creating a new account. After clicking on "Create Account", enter your name and e-mail information and click "Next". Your e-mail information is very important. Enter your institution and address information as appropriate, and then click "Next." Enter a user ID and password of your choice (we recommend using your e-mail address as your user ID), and then select your area of expertise. Click "Finish". 4. If you have an account but have forgotten your log in details, go to "Password Help" on the Manuscript Central log-in page and enter your email address. The system will send you an automatic user ID and password reminder. 5. Log-in and select "Author Center."
3.2 Submitting Your Manuscript
6. After you have logged in, click the "Submit a Manuscript" link in the menu bar. 7. Enter data and answer questions as appropriate. 8. Click the "Next" button on each screen to save your work and advance to the next screen. 9. You are required to upload your files. Click on the "Browse" button and locate the file on your computer. Select the designation of each file in the drop down next to the Browse button. When you have selected all files you wish to upload, click the "Upload Files" button. 10. Review your submission (in both PDF and HTML formats) before sending to the Journal. Click the "Submit" button when you are finished reviewing.
3.3 Manuscript Files Accepted
Manuscripts may be submitted from any country, and must be written in clear, concise and readable English. All listed authors should have seen and approved the submitted article.
If the paper derives from a report or other larger work that is available on the Web, then the content should be substantially different or present a different perspective.
Manuscripts should be uploaded as Word (.doc) files (not write-protected) plus separate figure files. GIF, JPEG, PICT or Bitmap files are acceptable for submission, but only high resolution TIF or EPS files are suitable for printing. The files will be automatically converted to HTML and PDF on upload and will be used for the review process.
3.4 Blinded Review
All manuscripts submitted to Health Information and Libraries Journal will be reviewed by two experts in the field. Health Information and Libraries Journal uses double-blinded review. The names of the reviewers will thus not be disclosed to the author submitting a paper and the name(s) of the author(s) will not be disclosed to the reviewers.
To allow double-blinded review, plus submit (upload) your main manuscript and title page as separate files.
Please upload: - Your manuscript without title page under the file designation "main document" - Figure files under the file designation "figures" - The title page, Acknowledgements and Conflict of Interest Statement where applicable, should be uploaded under the file designation "title page".
All documents uploaded under the file designation "title page" will not be viewable in the HTML and PDF format you are asked to review at the end of the submission process. The files viewable in the HTML and PDF format are the files available to the reviewer in the review process.
3.5 Suspension of Submission Mid-way in the Submission Process
You may suspend a submission at any phase before clicking the "Submit" button and save it to submit later. After submission, you will receive a confirmation e-mail. You can also access Manuscript Central any time to check the status of your manuscript. The Journal will inform you by e-mail once a decision has been made.
3.6 E-mail Confirmation of Submission
After submission, the Editor will acknowledge it within five days. For an original article, the Editor and Associate Editor, using the database of expertise, will select two appropriate referees. The Associate Editor will contact referees to ascertain their availability. Within 1 week of receipt, the referees will be sent the manuscript together with a "Manuscript Evaluation" form and "Guidelines for Referees". All referees are informed that manuscripts are sent on the understanding that strict confidentiality is maintained.
3.7 Manuscript Status
You can access Manuscript Central any time to check your "Author Center" for the status of your manuscript. The Journal will inform you by e-mail once a decision has been made.
3.8 Submission of Revised Manuscripts
In some cases, authors of rejected papers are invited to resubmit if they can address the major criticisms by revision and/or additional material. The Associate Editor will write to the author giving a checklist of points to be considered before resubmission. All resubmitted and revised manuscripts are subjected to careful re-examination and no guarantee is made about their ultimate acceptability. Revised manuscripts must be signed and approved by all authors.
Please remember to delete any old files uploaded when you upload your revised manuscript. Please also remember to upload your manuscript document separate from your title page.
4. MANUSCRIPT TYPES ACCEPTED
Review articles: up to 10000 words (including references and tables). Intending authors should contact the Review Editor, in advance, to discuss possible topics.
Original articles: 1000-5000 words (including references and tables), subject to peer review. Papers should present interesting and important developments within the field, original ideas and findings, case studies and service innovations. The paper should be structured to include an abstract, an introduction, objectives, a literature review, methods, results, discussion, conclusion and a bibliography. This should be accompanied by a structured abstract of not more than 200 words. In most cases the structure should be: Background -describing the problem/issue the research seeks to address Objectives- a clear description of the aims of the study Methods- describing research tools/processes use Results- a brief summary of main results with figures where appropriate Conclusions- primary conclusions and their implications, suggest areas for further research if appropriate
For a systematic review the following structure may be more appropriate: Question - one sentence clearly stating the precise objective(s) or question(s) addressed in the study Data sources- Source of data/studies, including years Study selection - Inclusion or exclusion criteria to select the data sources selected Main results - a precise statement of the major findings of the study; outcomes of the study should be provided and quantified Conclusions - All major conclusions supported by data should be given. Note if additional research is recommended
Keywords: No less than 4 and up to 10 keywords should be provided during the submission. These should be selected from MESH headings available at http://www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/MBrowser.html
Key Messages: A key messages box should be provided with each article. This should include up to 5 messages on key points of policy and up to 3 on implication for practice This also applies to articles solicited for themed issues.
5. MANUSCRIPT FORMAT AND STRUCTURE
5.1 Format
Language: The language of publication is English. Authors for whom English is a second language must have their manuscript professionally edited by an English speaking person before submissio to make sure the English is of a high quality. It is preferred that manuscripts are professionally edited. A list of independent suppliers of editing services can be found at www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor/engish_language.asp. All services are paid for and arranged by the author, and use of one of these services does not guarantee acceptance or preference for publication. This should conform with the Concise Oxford English Dictionary.
Referees are asked to examine writing style as well as content. It is therefore important that authors take care in submitting a manuscript that is written in plain language and adheres to published guidelines (see The new Fowler's Modern English Usage 3rd ed. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996; Hall G.M. How to write a paper. London: BMJ Publishing, 1994).
Authors should:
Aim at simplicity Focus on the main topic Use familiar words Use short paragraphs Avoid unnecessary words especially adjectives Use active verbs Use headings to break up text Pay attention to grammar and punctuation Remember that they will be writing for people whose first language may not be English Not use abbreviations on their own. Where abbreviations are used they should appear in full followed by abbreviation/acronym in brackets e.g. National Health Service (NHS) thereafter initials only may be used. Descriptions of statistical methods should include the following:
Study objective(s) Study design Data collection methods, source of research subjects and selection methods, with justifications Study procedure Response rate Data analysis with statistical methods used and appropriate references Main results with confidence intervals Actual P values obtained rather than ranges (e.g. P=0.143 rather than P>0.05); the test statistic; degrees of freedom; and sample size (even for negative results) Study limitations 5.2 Structure
All manuscripts submitted to Health Information and Libraries Journal should include initial copy, any revisions and final copy. Manuscripts should be submitted as an e-mail attachment, preferably in word format, to the Editorial office (where this is not possible one hard copy plus a copy on disk should be sent. (Identify the disk with the first author's surname, the short title of the paper and the journal title. Do not use carriage return (enter) at the end of lines within a paragraph. Do not use capitals in article titles or headings unless this is the journal's style. Turn the hyphenation option off, so that only 'hard' hyphens are used. Specify any special characters used to represent a non-keyboard character. Do not key superscript and subscripts at a size different to the body of the text. With regard to tables, use only one tab to separate each column; do not use multiple spaces nor a word-processing package's column format because this necessitates retabulation of data).
Manuscript pages, on which text appears, should be numbered consecutively. Footnotes in the text and personal acknowledgments should be kept to a minimum. Text footnotes should be related to the text by means of symbols.
Title page: The title of the paper together with author names and contact details should appear on a separate sheet. Main text: Include only the title of the paper in the main body of the article. Acknowledgements: Where acknowledgements are made it should be explicit that the person(s) acknowledged are not held responsible for the content of the paper. Personal acknowledgments should be kept to a minimum and placed at the end of the text, before the references.
5.3 References
The editorial team is responsible only for the format of references, but the author will be held responsible for the accuracy of content of bibliographic reference.
Reference citations should conform to the "Vancouver" style (see British Medical Journal 1991 302 338-41). References should be numbered consecutively in the order in which they appear in the text by means of superscript arabic numerals. They should be assembled in numerical order at the end of the article and submitted on a separate sheet. Names and initials of all authors should be given: do not use et al.
cite journal references in the following order: author's last name and initials; article title; full name of the journal; year of publication; volume and issue number; inclusive pages. e.g. Brice, A. Connecting Anglia & Oxford to core health information. Health Information and Libraries Journal 1998, 15, 196-200
Where each issue of a journal has separate pagination the issue number or date of issue should be given after the volume number.
e.g. Hull, J. Do nurses get involved with research? Nursing Times 1995, 91 (4), 11-12
cite book references as follows: author's last name and initials; book title, place of publication; publisher; year; series, if applicable. e.g. Sackett, D.L., Richardson, W.S., Rosenberg, W.M. & Haynes, R.B. Evidence Based Medicine: How to practice and teach EBM. London: Churchill Livingstone, 1996.
cite a chapter in a book as follows: author of chapter; title of chapter; "In"; editor of complete work; book title; edition statement; place of publication; publisher; year; inclusive pages of chapter. e.g. Poll, R. The House that Jack built: the consequences of Measuring. In: Wressell, P. (ed.) Proceedings of the 2nd Northumbria International conference on performance measurement in libraries and information services, 1997. Newcastle upon Tyne: Information North, 1998: pp39-45
cite electronic material as follows: authors' last name and initials; date, and/or last update/document version; title, including the journal reference if applicable; publication details or URL. Journal article e.g. Tent, J (1995, February 13). Citing e-texts summary. Linguist List,6 (310) [Online serial] . URL http://lamp.infosys.utas.edu.au/citation.txt
Monograph e.g. Beckleheimer, J (1994). How do you cite URL's in a bibliography? [WWW document]. URL
The Editor and Publisher recommend that citation of online published papers and other material should be done via a DOI (digital object identifier) which all reputable online published material should have - see www.doi.org/ for more information. If an author cites anything which does not have a DOI they run the risk of the cited material not being traceable.
We recommend the use of a tool such as EndNote or Reference Manager for reference management and formatting. EndNote reference styles can be searched for here: http://www.endnote.com/support/enstyles.asp Reference Manager reference styles can be searched for here: http://www.refman.com/support/rmstyles.asp
5.4 Tables, Figures and Figure Legends
Tables should be supplied as hard copy. Figures should be supplied in either TIFF or EPS format at 300 dpi or above.
Photographs should be glossy and submitted on A4 sheets. Tables, graphs or figures should be on separate sheets and should be numbered with Arabic numerals to correspond to their appearance in the text. Legends should be given as appropriate. Further information can be obtained at the Journal website: http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/hir and at Blackwell Publishing's guidelines for illustrations: www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor/illustration.asp.
Preparation of Electronic Figures for Publication - Although low quality images are adequate for review purposes, print publication requires high quality images to prevent the final product being blurred or fuzzy. Submit EPS (line art) or TIFF (halftone/photographs) files only. MS PowerPoint and Word Graphics are unsuitable for printed pictures. Do not use pixel-orientated programmes. Scans (TIFF only) should have a resolution of at least 300 dpi (halftone) or 600 to 1200 dpi (line drawings) in relation to the reproduction size (see below). Please submit the data for figures in black and white or submit a Colour Work Agreement Form (see Colour Charges below). EPS files should be saved with fonts embedded (and with a TIFF preview if possible).
For scanned images, the scanning resolution (at final image size) should be as follows to ensure good reproduction: line art >600 dpi; halftones (including gel photographs): >300 dpi; figures containing both halftone and line images: >600 dpi.
Further information can be obtained at Blackwell Publishing's guidelines for figures: www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor/illustration.asp
Check your electronic artwork before submitting it: www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor/eachecklist.asp
Permissions: If all or parts of previously published illustrations are used, permission must be obtained from the copyright holder concerned. It is the author's responsibility to obtain these in writing and provide copies to the Publisher.
Colour Charges: It is the policy of the Health Information and Libraries Journal for authors to pay the full cost for the reproduction of their colour artwork. Therefore, please note that if there is colour artwork in your manuscript when it is accepted for publication, Blackwell Publishing require you to complete and return a Colour Work Agreement Form (www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/SN_Sub2000_X_CoW.pdf) before your paper can be published. Any article received by Blackwell Publishing with colour work will not be published until the form has been returned.
5.5 Supplementary Material
Publication in electronic formats has created opportunities for adding details or whole sections in the electronic version only. Authors need to work closely with the editors in developing or using such new publication formats.
Supplementary Material, such as data sets or additional figures or tables, that will not be published in the print edition of the journal, but which will be viewable via the online edition, can be submitted.
It should be clearly stated at the time of submission that the Supplementary Material is intended to be made available through the online edition. If the size or format of the Supplementary Material is such that it cannot be accommodated on the Journal's website, the author agrees to make the Supplementary Material available free of charge on a permanent website, to which links will be set up from the Journal's website. The author must advise Blackwell Publishing if the URL of the website where the Supplementary Material is located changes. The content of the Supplementary Material must not be altered after the paper has been accepted for publication.
The availability of Supplementary Material should be indicated in the main manuscript by a paragraph, to appear after the References, headed "Supplementary Material" and providing titles of figures, tables etc. In order to protect reviewer anonymity, material posted on the author's website cannot be reviewed. The Supplementary Material is an integral part of the article and will be reviewed accordingly.
Extra issues: Larger papers or monographs may be published as additional issues (numbered as ordinary issues), the full cost being paid by the author. Further information may be obtained from the editor.
6. AFTER ACCEPTANCE
Upon acceptance of a paper for publication, the manuscript will be forwarded to the Production Editor who is responsible for the production of the journal.
6.1 Proof Corrections
Proofs will be sent via e-mail as a PDF file. The e-mail server must be able to accept attachments up to 4MB in size. Acrobat Reader will be required in order to read this file. This software can be downloaded (free of charge) from the following website: ww.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readerstep2.html. This will enable the file to be opened, read on screen, and printed out in order for any corrections to be added. Further instructions will be sent with the proof. Hard copy proofs will be posted if no e-mail address is available; in your absence, please arrange for a colleague to access your e-mail to retrieve the proofs.
Proofs must be returned to the Production Editor within three days of receipt.
6.2 OnlineEarly (Publication Prior to Print)
Health Information and Libraries Journal is covered by Blackwell Publishing's OnlineEarly service. OnlineEarly articles are complete full-text articles published online in advance of their publication in a printed issue. Articles are therefore available as soon as they are ready, rather than having to wait for the next scheduled print issue. OnlineEarly articles are complete and final. They have been fully reviewed, revised and edited for publication, and the authors' final corrections have been incorporated. Because they are in final form, no changes can be made after online publication. The nature of OnlineEarly articles means that they do not yet have volume, issue or page numbers, so OnlineEarly articles cannot be cited in the traditional way. They are therefore given a Digital Object Identifier (DOI), which allows the article to be cited and tracked before it is allocated to an issue. After print publication, the DOI remains valid and can continue to be used to cite and access the article.
6.3 Author Services
Online production tracking is available for your article through Blackwell's Author Services. Author Services enables authors to track their article - once it has been accepted - through the production process to publication online and in print. Authors can check the status of their articles online and choose to receive automated e-mails at key stages of production. The author will receive an e-mail with a unique link that enables them to register and have their article automatically added to the system. Please ensure that a complete e-mail address is provided when submitting the manuscript. Visit www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor for more details on online production tracking and for a wealth of resources including FAQs and tips on article preparation, submission and more.
For more substantial information on the services provided for authors, please see Blackwell Publishing Author Services.
6.4 Author Material Archive Policy
Please note that unless specifically requested, Blackwell Publishing will dispose of all material submitted two months after publication. If you require the return of any material submitted, please inform the editorial office or Production Editor as soon as possible.
6.5 Offprints and Extra Copies
The corresponding author will be sent a free PDF offprint of their article. Additional offprints can be ordered on the offprint order form that accompanies the proofs. Payment must be made in advance.
Editorial Board
Editorial Office Abigail Turner, Editorial Assistant Blackwell Publishing Ltd 9600 Garsington Road Oxford OX4 2DQ UK Tel: +44 (0)1865 476540 Fax: +44 (0)1865 471540 E-mail: Abigail.turner@wiley.com
Editor Graham Walton Service Development Manager University Library Loughborough University Loughborough LE11 3TU UK Tel: +44 (0)1509 222355 Fax: +44 (0)1509 223993 E-mail: graham.walton@lboro.ac.uk
Assistant Editor Penny Bonnett 61 Greenhill Buckhurst Hill Essex IG9 5SQ UK Tel/Fax: +44 (0) 208 5044675 E-mail: pabonnett@ukonline.co.uk
Review Editor Maria Grant, Centre for Nursing Midwifery and Collaborative Research University of Salford C707 Allerton Building Salford M6 6PU UK Tel: +44 (0)161 2956423 Fax: +44 (0)161 2952241 E mail: M.J.Grant@salford.ac.uk
Regional Associate Editor (Australasia) Rowena Cullen School of Information Management Victoria University of Wellington P O Box 600 New Zealand Tel: +644 4635788 Fax: +644 4635446 E-mail: Rowena.Cullen@vuw.ac.nz
Regional Associate Editor (North America) Feili Tu Assistant Professor School of Library and Information Science College of Mass Communications and Information Studies University of South Carolina Columbia, SC 29208 USA Tel: +1 (803) 7771026 E-Mail: tuf@gwm.sc.edu
Column Editors
Using Evidence in Practice Andrew Booth Director of Information Resources School of Health and Related Research University of Sheffield 30 Regent St Sheffield S1 4DA UK Tel: +44 (0)114 2220705 Fax: +44 (0)114 27244089 E-mail: A.Booth@sheffield.ac.uk
International Perspectives and Ininiatives Jeanette Murphy Centre for Health Informatics & Multiprofessional Education (CHIME) University College London Royal Free and University College Medical School Archway Campus 4th Floor Holborn Union Building Highgate Hill London N19 5LW UK Tel: +44 (0)20 72883044 Email: j.murphy@chime.ucl.ac.uk
Learning and Teaching in Action Margaret ES Forrest Campus Library School of Nursing & Midwifery University of Dundee Fife Campus Forth Avenue Kirkcaldy KY2 5YS UK Tel: +44 (0)1382 345930 E-mail: M.E.S.Forrest@Dundee.ac.uk
Book Reviews Donald Mackay Head of Health Care Libraries Cairns Library Oxford University The John Radcliffe Hospital Headington Oxford OX3 9DU UK Tel: +44 (0)1865 221937 E-mail: Donald.Mackay@hcl.ox.ac.uk
Editorial Board Betsy Anagnostelis - Royal Free and University College Medical School of UCL and Royal Free Hampstead NHS Trust, London, UK Suzanne Bakker - Netherlands Cancer Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Pauline Blagden - St Mary's Hospital, Portsmouth, UK Michael Brittain - Health Information Consultant, Oxford, UK Federica Napolitani Cheyne - Istituto Superiore di Sanita, Italy Susan Crawford - University of Illinois, USA Brian Fitzgerald - University of Limerick, Ireland Bob Gann - Help for Health Trust, Winchester, UK Emily Harker - Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust, Wakefield, UK William Hersh - Department of Medical Informatics & Clinical Epidemiology, USA Sue Lacey-Bryant - Independent Information Specialist, Thame, UK Jackie Lord - Head of Library and Information Services, Royal College of Nursing, London, UK Ann Ritchie - Charles Darwin University, Australia Tom Roper - University of Sussex Library, UK Mark A. Spasser - Josey Health Sciences Library, USA Ben Toth - NHS Information Authority, UK Christine Urquhart - University of Wales Aberystwyth, UK Jeremy Wyatt - Health Informatics Centre, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK Jean Yeoh - Kings College London, UK
Health Libraries Group Alan Fricker - Chair
International Editorial Consultant Joanne Marshall, University of North Carolina, USA
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