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Uniform requirements for manuscripts submitted to biomedical journals
Internation Committee of Medical Journal Editors 朝鮮大學校 附設 醫學硏究所 1989 The Medical Journal of Chosun University Vol.14 No.2
In January 1978 a group of editors from some major biomedical journals published in Englihs met in Vancouver, British Columbia, and decided on uniform technical requirements for manuscripts to be submitted to their journals. These requirements, including formats for bibliographic references developed for the Vancouver group by the National Library of Medicine, were published in three of the journals early in 1979. The Vancouver group evolved into the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. At the October 1981 meeting the requirements were revised slightly and published in a second edition in 1982. Since then the group has issued several separate statements, and these have been incorporated into the main part of this, the third, edition. Over 300 journals have agreed to receive manuscripts prepared in accordance with the initial, previously published, requirements. It is important to emphasise what these requirements imply and what they do not. Firstly, the requirements are instructions to authors on how to prepare manuscripts, not to editors on publication style(But many journals have drawn on these requirements for elements of their pubilcation styles.) Secondly, if authors prepare their manuscripts in the style specified in these requirements editors of the participating journals will not return manuscripts for changes in these details of style. Even so, manuscripts may be altered by journals to conform with details of their own publication styles. Thirdly, authors sending manuscripts to a participating journal should not try to prepare them in accordance with the publication style of that journal but should follow the "Uniform requirements for manuscripts submitted to biomedical journals." Nevertheless authors must also follow the instructions to authors in the journal as to what topics are suitable for that journal and the types of papers that may be submitted-for example, original articles, reviews, case reports. In addition, the journal's instructions are likely to contain other requirements unique to that journal, such as number of copies of manuscripts, acceptable languages, length of articles, and approved abbreviations. Participating journals are expected to state in their instructions to authors that their requirements are in accordance with the "Uiform requirements for manuscripts submitted to biomedical journals" and to cite a published version. This document will be revised at intervals. Inquiries and comments from Central and North America about these requirements should be sent to Edward J Huth, MD, Annals of Internal Medicine, 4200 Pine Street, Philadelphia, P A 19104, USA; those from other regions should be sent to Stephen Lock, MD, British Medical Journal, British Medical Association, Tavistock Square, London WCIH 9JR, United Kingdom, Note these two journals provide secretariat services for the Itnerantional Committee of Medical Journal Editors; they do not handle manuscripts intended for other journals. Paper intended for other journals should be sent directly to the offices of those journals.