期刊名称:HEALTH SOCIOLOGY REVIEW

ISSN:1446-1242
出版频率:Tri-annual
出版社:ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON, ENGLAND, OXON, OX14 4RN
  出版社网址:http://www.e-contentmanagement.com/
期刊网址:http://hsr.e-contentmanagement.com/
影响因子: 0.446(2015年) 0.515(2014年) 0.456(2013年) 0.435 (2012年)
主题范畴:HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES;    SOCIOLOGY

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 & Scope: An international, scholarly, peer-reviewed journal, Health Sociology Review (ISSN 1446-1242) explores the contribution of sociology and sociological research methods to understanding health and illness; to health policy, promotion and practice; and to equity, social justice, social policy and social work.


Instructions to Authors

Author Guidelines

There are no page charges and no monetary payments for contributions to this journal. The corresponding author receives one complimentary copy of the issue in which their article appears together with an electronic copy of the article to distribute to co-authors. The notes below are intended as a brief guide for contributors. Please note that these guidelines were updated in January 2008.

 

Article submission

Articles should be within the aims and scope of the journal and approximately 6000 words. Longer articles may be negotiated with the Editor-in-Chief. Materials should be prepared and submitted electronically to HSReditorial@e-contentmanagement.com according to the guidelines below. Authors are also advised to consult http://www.healthsociologyreview.com/ for sample articles, summaries, key words, reference lists, tables and figures.

The publisher, eContent Management Pty Ltd, uses a semi-automated manuscript tracking system to receive research articles. Manuscripts submitted for publication are subject to a peer review process managed by the editors under the direction of the Editor-in-Chief. To ensure prompt assessment of your manuscript, and to preserve anonymity in the review process, please observe the following steps:

1.  Save your manuscript as a Microsoft Word file. This document file should contain: title of the manuscript, 100-150-word abstract, 6 key words, article text, references, figures, and tables (in that order), as one document. It is recommended that one of the key words be ‘sociology' to ensure the article is accurately identified in international citation indexes.

2.  Please do not include any author information in this manuscript attachment. It will be forwarded directly to reviewers and should not contain any identifying information.

3.  Include all other information in the body text of an email letter addressed to Dr Fran Collyer, Editor-in-Chief. This email letter should contain: the manuscript title, author(s) names, institutional affilation and address of each author, email contact details of each author, and acknowledgements. Please use an asterisk to identify the author to whom all correspondence should be sent. In addition, a statement should be included to warrant the material has not been previously published and is not under consideration for publication elsewhere.

4.  Check the body text of your email to ensure you have listed all authors in the order they should appear in the published version of the paper. Also ensure any acknowledgements are included in the email and not in the manuscript attachment.

5.  Email this cover letter with your Word file manuscript attachment to HSReditorial@e-contentmanagement.com. Do not attach any other documents to your email.

Please refer to the 'Style Guide' below for references, citation and spelling conventions and to 'Tables and Figures' for acceptable file and photo types for print publishing.

 

Article revisions

The above requirements also apply to authors submitting revised manuscripts. It is important for revising authors to provide a brief summary indicating how they have addressed the referees' and editor's comments. This information should be contained in an email letter with the revised electronic manuscript as an attachment.

 

Style guide

The Health Sociology Review uses Australian spelling conventions. These are based on the English, not American language. Authors who are not fluent in the English language are encouraged to use the services of a professional translator prior to submission. Subheadings should be kept concise, provided in lower case (except for the first letter of the first word and proper nouns), and the various levels clearly differentiated without the use of numerals. Footnotes should be termed 'Endnotes', used sparingly, and not be used for citing references. The accuracy and format of reference citations are the authors' responsibility (see also 'Copyright' below).

 

Citations within text

The Harvard system is used for referencing. 'Ibid', 'loc cit' or 'op cit' must not be used. Author surname(s), date(s) and page number(s) are given in brackets in the text, for example: (Parbury and Ruffin 1997:62).

If author names appear as part of the flow of the text, the year appears in parentheses after the name, with a specific page reference appearing after a colon, for example: Smith (1999:145).

Where there are three or more authors, the first name is followed by et al (in italics), and the date, for example: (Clark et al 1997; Smith 1992).

Multiple and separate citations need to be indicated through semicolons, for example: (Clarke et al 1997; Smith 1992; Parbury and Ruffin 1997), with multiple publications by the same author separated with a comma (e.g. Parbury 1997, 1995). The symbol ?amp;' is not to be used in the text.

Please note the full stop should be placed after a reference, not before it. For example:

 ‘Generally speaking, theoretical issues are not discussed in this work' (Bracks et al 1977).

 

Reference list

All works cited in the text must be provided in the list of 'References'. This list must be in alphabetical order, according to the surname (family name) of the author. In general, the citation should be organised according to surname, initials, date of publication, title of paper or book, publisher and place of publication. If several works by the same authors are cited, they should be listed in order of publication, the earliest last, with publications from the same year differentiated with the designation '1999a', '1999b', and so on. Submitting authors should take note of the examples below, where sentence case is used (lower case letters are predominant), and spaces and extraneous punctuation have been eliminated:

Hunt, L. (1996) ‘Social movements and the construction of health knowledge: A case study of the women's health movement' Annual Review Of Health Social Sciences 6:157-172.

Nicholson, L.J. (1999) The Play Of Reason: From The Modern To The Postmodern Open University Press: Buckingham, UK.

Saggers, S. and Gray, D. (2001) ‘Theorising indigenous health: A political economy of health and substance misuse' Health Sociology Review 10(2):21-32.

Broom, D. (1998) ‘Gender and health' in J. Germov (ed) Second Opinion: An Introduction To Health Sociology Oxford University Press: Melbourne, pp. 39-56.

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2002) Australia's Health 2002 AIHW: Canberra.

Commonwealth Department of Community Services and Health (1989) The National Women's Health Policy: Advancing Women's Health In Australia Australian General Printing Service: Canberra.

Doyal, L. (1998) ‘A draft framework for designing national health policies with an integrated gender perspective' in Mainstreaming the Gender Perspective into the Health Sector: Expert Group Meeting on Women and Health Discussion Papers United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women available at: http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/csw/papers1.htm

Foucault, M. (1980) ‘The politics of health in the eighteenth century' in C. Gordon (ed) Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Other Writings 1972-1977, Michel Foucault Pantheon Books: New York, pp. 166-182.

DiPrete Brown, L.; Askov, K.; Miller Franco, L.; Nicholas, D.; Lopez Acuña, D.; Montenegro, H. and Infante, A. (2003) Maximizing Quality of Care Through Health Sector Reform: The Role of Quality Assurance Strategies. Working Draft. Published for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) by the Quality Assurance Project. Available at: www.qaproject.org/pubs/PDFs/PAHO.pdf [Date of access: 10.04.06].

Little, P.; Everitt, H.; Williamson, I.; Warner, G.; Moore, M.; Gould, C.; Ferrier, K. and Payne, S. (2001) ‘Observational study of effect of patient centredness and positive approach on outcomes of general practice consultations' British Medical Journal 323:908-911.

 

Tables and figures

Tables, figures and appendixes should be supplied at the end of the main text, with their desired locations cross-referenced within the text. Tables and figures should be numbered consecutively in separate sequences with Arabic numerals (e.g. 1, 2, 3), and have self-explanatory captions. The maximum final size of published figures and tables will be 200 mm x 145 mm, landscape or portrait.

All line diagrams and photographs are 'Figures'. Line diagrams should be suitable for immediate black and white reproduction (i.e. not require redrawing). Photographs should be clear black and whites with good contrast.

Figure labels should be in bold, italic and roman Helvetica or Arial fonts, with minimum capitalisation. If line diagrams are presented only as hard copy, colours and greys are not to be used; however, if figures are also supplied electronically, greys can be included. Electronic TIFFs or EPS files are preferred using high resolution (300 dpi and above). GIFFs and JPEG files at lower resolution (below 150 dpi) are NOT suitable for print publishing.

Submitting authors should note that tables should be constructed so that they will not lose their formatting when sent electronically across potentially different platforms. Authors wishing to publish complex numerical tables may be asked to fax or post a hard copy of these tables to the Editor-in-Chief to ensure accurate reproduction is achieved.

 

Author warranties

By submission of material to Health Sociology Review, all authors warrant that the material is their own, original material or that copyright clearance has been acquired to reproduce other material from employers, third parties or attributed to third parties. It is the responsibility of the authors to secure the release of any copyright material and to provide written evidence to this effect to eContent Management Pty Ltd. It is also the authors' responsibility to obtain clearance for reproduction from any organisation which commissioned the work (if applicable).

Submission of material to Health Sociology Review implies all authors' consent to assignment of the material's copyright to eContent Management Pty Ltd when that material is accepted for publication in the journal, for the full legal term of copyright and any renewals thereof throughout the world in all formats and in any medium of communication (see Copyright below).

By submitting material to Health Sociology Review, all authors of the material agree to indemnify eContent Management Pty Ltd, and its heirs and assigns in business, against any litigation or claims that may arise from the content of or opinions in the material provided.

On acceptance for publication, an agreement specifying these terms will be sent to the corresponding author for signature by all authors of that manuscript.

 

Copyright

Copyright of published articles is held by eContent Management Pty Ltd. No limitation will be placed on the personal freedom of authors to copy or to use in subsequent work, material contained in their papers. Please contact the Publisher for clarification if you are unsure of the use of copyright material. Apart from fair dealing for the purposes of research and private study, or criticism and or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968 of Australia, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the Publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms of the licences issued by the Copyright Agency Limited:

Level 19, 157 Liverpool Street
Sydney NSW 2000
Australia
Tel: +61 2 9394 7600
Fax: +61 2 9394 7601;
info@copyright.com.au
http://www.copyright.com.au/
ISSN 1447-9338
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eContent Management Pty Ltd 2008

 

Health Sociology Review
Published by eContent Management Pty Ltd
PO Box 1027 Maleny
Queensland 4552 Australia
Phone: +61-7-5435-2900
Fax: +61-7-5435-2911
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Editorial Board

Editorial Board

Editors In Chief

Fran Collyer
Department of Sociology & Social Policy
University of Sydney
NSW 2006, Australia

 

Book Reviews Editor

Dorothy Broom
Australian National University, Australia

Editors

Jane Edwards
University of South Australia

Peter Gale
University of South Australia

Simon Kitto
Monash University

Pauline Savy
La Trobe University

Editorial Advisory Board

Liz Beddoe
University of Auckland, NZ

Hilke Brockman
University of Bremen, Germany

Bo Burstrom
Karolinska Institute, Sweden

Ian Coulter
UCLA School of Dentistry, USA

Jeanne Daly
La Trobe University, Australia

Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good
Harvard Medical School, USA

David de Vaus
La Trobe University, Australia

Yuriko Doi
National Inst. of Public Health, Japan

Gary Easthope
University of Tasmania, Australia

Meei-Ling Gau
Nat'l Taipei College Nursing, Taiwan

Dr Sarah Hean
Senior Lecturer (Research Methods)
Institute of Health and Community Studies
Bournemouth University, Bournemouth U.K.

Alena Heitlinger
Trent University, Canada

Hirono Ishikawa
University of Tokyo, Japan

Allan Kellehear
La Trobe University, Australia

Ernest Khalema
University of Alberta, Canada

Marwan Khawaja
American Univ. of Beirut, Lebanon

Chris King
La Trobe University, Australia

Yasuhito Kinoshita
Rikkyo (St Paul's) University, Japan

Soonman Kwon
Seoul National University, Korea

Olle Lundberg
Karolinska Institute, Sweden

Emerson Elias Merhy
Universidade de Campinas, Brazil

Beverley McNamara
University of Western Australia

Madeleine Murtagh
University of Newcastle, UK

Jake Najman
University of Queensland, Australia

Pauline Prior
Queen's University, Northern Ireland

Stella Quah
National University of Singapore

Gary Robinson
Charles Darwin University, Australia

Jane Shoebridge
Flinders University, Australia

Stephanie Short
Queensland University of Technology, Australia

Paulin Straughan
National University of Singapore

Ann Taylor
University of Newcastle, Australia

Carine Vassy
University of Paris, France

Isabelle Ville
Inserm - Cermes, France

Eileen Willis
Faculty of Health Sciences
Flinders University, Bedford Park SA, Australia

Markus Worz
Univ. of Technology Berlin, Germany


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