| Literature DB >> 17894854 |
Kay Dickersin1, Elizabeth Ssemanda, Catherine Mansell, Drummond Rennie.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In an effort to identify previously unrecognized aspects of editorial decision-making, we explored the words and phrases that one group of editors used during their meetings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17894854 PMCID: PMC2121101 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-7-44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
JAMA's Key and Critical Objectives
| To promote the science and art of medicine and the betterment of the public health | |
| 1. | To maintain the highest standards of editorial integrity independent of any special interests |
| 2. | To publish original, important, well-documented, peer-reviewed articles on a diverse range of medical topics |
| 3. | To provide physicians with continuing education in basic and clinical science to support informed clinical decisions |
| 4. | To enable physicians to remain informed in multiple areas of medicine, including developments in fields other than their own |
| 5. | To improve health and health care internationally by elevating the quality of medical care, disease prevention, and research |
| 6. | To foster responsible and balanced debate on issues that affect medicine and health care |
| 7. | To anticipate important issues and trends in medicine and health care |
| 8. | To inform readers about nonclinical aspects of medicine and public health, including the political, philosophic, ethical, legal, environmental, economic, historical, and cultural |
| 9. | To recognize that, in addition to these specific objectives, THE JOURNAL has a social responsibility to improve the total human condition and to promote the integrity of science |
| 10. | To achieve the highest level of ethical medical journalism and to produce a publication that is timely, credible, and enjoyable to read |
Classification Schema for 2376 Written and Spoken Phrases
| Aspects of the quality of the description of the design and methods as well as the methods themselves, from the hypothesis, to assumptions, to bias, to outcomes defined. Also includes some factual statements, such as the type of study design used. | ||
| Concern about message, tone, context, scholarship, rationale for conclusions drawn, whether conclusions match study strength, adequacy of references, preliminary or early results, need for additional discussion. | ||
| Analysis is appropriate, inappropriate, incorrect, incomplete, not clear; rates and measures used. Adjustment for confounders and effect modifiers, issues related to subgroup analysis, intention to treat analysis. | ||
| Concerns about the population or database and why it was chosen, more information about population needed, potential for selection bias, response rate. | ||
| Any comment about power, size of study sample or the dataset. | ||
| Methods specifically concerning measures used and whether they are reliable, valid, are expressed correctly, are sufficient. | ||
| Comments that data or details about data are needed, including full CONSORT data. | ||
| Potential application of information beyond study population, representativeness of broader patient population. | ||
| Concerns about data quality, validity of data, completeness. | ||
| Concerns about financial and other conflicts of interest, as well as concerns about study ethics. | ||
| Any statement that the study, results, topic, disease, message are important, of interest, or common. | ||
| Reasons why it may be good to publish this paper or not (eg, published elsewhere, previous or current JAMA similar or related publication, need more like this). Specific mention of | ||
| Any phrase with "interesting" or similar word in it (eg, interesting topic, analysis, hypothesis), except "readers would find interesting". Includes comments relating to a low likelihood of publication leading to behavior change, or the fact that the paper doesn't add anything. Also includes fascinating, boring, good, excellent, great, relevant. | ||
| Any statement describing the study outcomes and results. | ||
| References to the author prominence or characteristics of the author (including where from, good group, published previously in | ||
| Concerns positive, negative or null results or findings of study, statistical significance, beneficial outcomes, positive, negative, modest association, clinically significant, effective intervention, size of association, and effect size. | ||
| Manuscript contains novel information, findings, data, is a novel study, uses novel methods. New information, unique data, innovation in some aspect of study, new methods, cool new technology, unique work, few similar studies. | ||
| Potential readership interest or lack of it, our readers would find it interesting, potential audience beyond medical community, public health interest, policy and government issues, correlation with current events. | ||
| More information needed in this area. | ||
| "Hot" or timely topic, topical, big stuff, causes excitement, enormous public health, political interest, pressing issue, increasingly discussed, emerging treatment or drug, problem, increasing disease incidence. | ||
| Results that refute or confirm standard thinking or practice. Provides new information about clinical problem. | ||
| Public and private sector response to the topic or findings, possible consequences of publication, including policy implications. Manuscript from government or policy makers. | ||
| A characteristic of the study that sets it apart from other studies. | ||
| Any comment about revisions needed, peer reviewer comments received, editor's own tendency to accept or reject. When a specific change is requested (eg, "still fuzzy about search strategy"), code with science or journalism, as appropriate. | ||
| Relates to presentation only, not clarity of description of study methods. | ||
All categories include positive and negative phrases. For the most part, phrases used here are descriptive and do not reflect exact oral or written statements.
Coded Reasons to Proceed and Not to Proceed with Publication, as Noted by Editors in Phrases on Written Forms Completed for Each Manuscript
| Research design & methods | Science | 144 (23.9) |
| Important to medicine | Journalism | 59 (9.8) |
| Peer review comments | Writing | 51 (8.4) |
| Analysis | Science | 49 (8.1) |
| Presentation & interpretation of results | Science | 46 (7.6) |
| Interesting results or topic | Journalism | 42 (7.0) |
| Power, sample size | Science | 26 (4.3) |
| Population studied | Science | 25 (4.1) |
| More data needed | Science | 19 (3.2) |
| Measures used | Science | 17 (3.0) |
| Writing | Writing | 15 (2.5) |
| Novel/new | Journalism | 14 (2.3) |
| Positive or negative results | Journalism | 12 (2.2) |
| Quality of the data | Science | 11 (2.0) |
| Other reasons | Science, journalism, writing | 73 (12.1) |