| Literature DB >> 25928695 |
Robbie Foy1, Anne Sales2,3, Michel Wensing4, Gregory A Aarons5, Signe Flottorp6, Bridie Kent7, Susan Michie8, Denise O'Connor9, Anne Rogers10, Nick Sevdalis11, Sharon Straus12, Paul Wilson13.
Abstract
The implementation of research findings into healthcare practice has become increasingly recognised as a major priority for researchers, service providers, research funders and policymakers over the past decade. Nine years after its establishment, Implementation Science, an international online open access journal, currently publishes over 150 articles each year. This is fewer than 30% of those submitted for publication. The majority of manuscript rejections occur at the point of initial editorial screening, frequently because we judge them to fall outside of journal scope. There are a number of common reasons as to why manuscripts are rejected on grounds of scope. Furthermore, as the field of implementation research has evolved and our journal submissions have risen, we have, out of necessity, had to become more selective in what we publish. We have also expanded our scope, particularly around patient-mediated and population health interventions, and will monitor the impact of such changes. We hope this editorial on our evolving priorities and common reasons for rejection without peer review will help authors to better judge the relevance of their papers to Implementation Science.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25928695 PMCID: PMC4409721 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-015-0240-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Summary of issues that influence the likelihood of rejection without review of articles submitted to
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| Potential significance | Work contextualised within existing implementation research literature | Work not contextualised within existing implementation research literature |
| Contribution to implementation research articulated and potentially significant | Contribution to implementation research not articulated or relatively minor | |
| Field of interest | Healthcare and population health | Anything else |
| Effectiveness studies | Evaluating the effectiveness of implementation of an evidence-based practice or policy, or de-implementation of those demonstrated to be relatively ineffective or even harmful | Evaluating the effectiveness of a clinical, organisational, public health or policy intervention |
| Outcome | Health or health-related | Anything else |
| Implementation | Researching implementation | Doing implementation |
| Validity | Maximises internal and external validity as appropriate in the chosen study designs | |
| Patient decision aids | Evaluations of the implementation of patient decision aids (of known effectiveness) into healthcare settings; involvement of healthcare providers | Initial development, pilot testing or evaluation of patient decision aids |
| Implementation direct to patients | Outcomes referring to evidence-based practice with some involvement of healthcare providers | Other types of outcomes |
| Intervention development reports | Prepared and submitted prior to the reporting of the effectiveness of the intervention |
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| Going to be, (robustly) evaluated | Not going to be (robustly) evaluated | |
| Providing empirical and/or theoretical rationale | ||
| Process evaluation | Submitted contemporaneously with or following report of intervention effectiveness | Process evaluations submitted in advance of the conduct of the main effectiveness analysis (it cannot be clear if they are explaining an effect or the absence of an effect) |
| Process evaluations that take account of the main evaluation outcomes | Process evaluations that do not take account of the main evaluation outcomes | |
| Pilot studies | If appropriate criteria for conduct | No justification for conduct |
| If appropriate degree of inference | Overclaim on basis of results | |
| If there are plans for further evaluation | ||
| Protocols | Been through peer review by a nationally recognised research agency as part of their funding | Not been through peer review by a nationally recognised research agency as part of their funding |
| Received ethics review board approval | Not received ethics review board approval | |
| Submitted prior to data cleaning or analysis | Have begun data cleaning or analysis (may not apply to some qualitative studies) |