| Literature DB >> 33920382 |
Abstract
A personal perspective is given on the processes involved in managing and sustaining a high-performing mental health recovery research group. The broader context of scholarship in the United Kingdom is outlined, in which academic productivity is commodified specifically in relation to peer-reviewed journal papers. Four leadership choices in developing a high-performing research group are discussed: optimal group size; sharing the workload; maintaining a programmatic focus; and performance expectations. Approaches to maximising innovation are identified, including emotional and intellectual engagement of team members, working with diverse stakeholders and convening communities of practice. We use a highly managed approach to publications from inception to acceptance, which is described in detail. The use of these approaches is illustrated in relation to the Recovery Research Team which was formed in 2009. Specific recovery-related issues covered include demonstrating the ability to develop a significant recovery research portfolio (our four current large [>UK£2 m] studies relate to recovery narratives, global mental health peer support work, digital interventions and Recovery Colleges); the positive implications of actively recruiting researchers with mental health lived experience; how performance issues are managed; our approach to involving lived experience co-authors in papers; and our decision to conduct mixed-methods rather than solely qualitative studies.Entities:
Keywords: lived experience; mental health; productivity; recovery; research management
Year: 2021 PMID: 33920382 PMCID: PMC8070016 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18084007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Recovery Research Team approach.
Planned Journal worksheet headings in study publications plan.
| Heading | Rationale |
|---|---|
| Paper number | A unique number for each planned paper. All within-team emails include in the subject line the name of the study and the paper number, e.g., NEON #9. The cell is colour coded to make an at-a-glance overview of progress easy: |
| Provisional title | As close to a finalised title as possible—so not, e.g., ‘Qualitative study’. No hyphens in the title [ |
| 1st author | The person who will write, or co-ordinate the writing of, the text to produce a complete first draft |
| Equal 1st author | An under-used option. Most journals allow this status, which is useful when authorship arrangements are complex such as in multi-site studies, and good for improving the CV of early career researchers |
| Other co-authors | Populate early with complete list in order. Use ‘name tbc’ (to be confirmed) when awaiting approval for involvement |
| Equal last author | Another under-used option which most journals allow and is useful for multi-site collaboration studies |
| Target journal | Identify target journal, normally before writing any of the paper |
| Status | Drop-down categories as shown in |
| Notes | Record target date for next milestone (e.g., ‘Full draft to co-authors by 22.1.22′) or submission history comprising submitted (‘S date’), revision requested (‘RR date’) and revision submitted (‘RS date’) details. Record previous rejections (‘No: journal name’) and future targets (‘Next: journal name’). For example: |
Status categories for papers.
| Category | Meaning | Tasks |
|---|---|---|
| No data, not started | Decision made to progress paper. May be next-in-line paper for lead author, or may be a key paper (e.g., trial report) for writing later in the study | Finalise provisional title, confirm exact author list and target journal. Think about content |
| Awaiting editorial response | Editor of a specific journal has been contacted to ask if the paper would be of interest | Amend target journal if necessary |
| Data being collected | Paper has started | Write Methods section and blank Results section, e.g., prepare un-populated tables |
| Data collected, analysis not started | Data collection complete | Clean data, prepare database and data dictionary |
| Analysis underway | Data currently being analysed | Present emerging findings in publications meeting for team support with interpretation |
| Analysis complete | Data analysis finished | Populate Results section |
| 1st draft underway | Full draft being written or co-ordinated by lead author | Write Introduction and Discussion, then Abstract. Add all journal-specific sections (e.g., author contributions) and follow author guidelines 100% |
| 1st draft circulated locally | Full draft goes to internal team (groups 1 to 3 in | Address all comments. Ensure all funder-required information is correct, e.g., Acknowledgements |
| Draft to all co-authors | Full draft goes to all authors including internal team again, with e.g., 3 week deadline. | Co-authors comment on full draft |
| Final draft underway | Lead author revises in light of all comments. Polish text. Work with specific co-author on individual section if needed. Write cover letter. | Create polished final version |
| Submission pending | Activate journal login and collate all materials needed for submission, e.g., recommended reviewers | Final look-over of full submission by study lead |
| Submitted | Lead author submits and confirms receipt | Submitted version sent to all co-authors |
| Revision requested | Journal requests revisions | Lead author informs internal team (but does not bother other authors), and co-ordinates revision |
| Revised version submitted | Lead author submits revision and confirms receipt | Lead author emails internal team with revised version to confirm re-submission |
| Re-drafting for next submission | Paper has been rejected | Lead author identifies new target journal, and re-drafts paper using process in |
| Accepted | Paper is accepted | Lead author emails all authors with Word and PDF versions of Author Final Draft, and confirms complete reference |
| Appealed | A rejection is being appealed | Lead author asks editor to re-consider their decision. Very rarely used |
Categories of author.
| Category | Role |
|---|---|
| 1. Core writing team | One or two lead authors who create the full draft |
| 2. Wider internal research team | Make wider contributions, including to data collection, analysis, and commenting |
| 3. Lived Experience Advisory Panel (LEAP) | Our larger studies all have a dedicated LEAP comprising 10 individuals with relevant lived experience, who work with us to ensure that lived experience informs every stage of our studies from design to dissemination. For most papers we identify two LEAP members to be co-authors. To note, other types of outputs such as chapters [ |
| 4. International Advisory Board (IAB) | Our larger studies also all have an International Advisory Board (IAB) typically comprising 6 to 10 thought leaders from across the world, to ensure we are collaborating with best-in-field researchers. One advantage of having international authors is the increase in citation of the paper [ |
| 5. Specific experts | We may contact a specific world-leading expert to request their input in exchange for co-authorship, which has proved a valuable mechanism for developing new collaborations. Or we may involve a topic-specific expert to sense check the paper, e.g., a peer support worker (PSW) co-author in our global mental health PSW study [ |
Process of re-submission after rejection.
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If the paper was rejected by the editor without peer review, then read the editor feedback. Carefully. If the editor thought it was their type of paper but not of sufficient quality or innovation then consider re-submitting to a similar type of journal. Or if the editor thought it was not their type of paper, then re-consider the type of journal you are submitting to. |
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If the paper was rejected after peer review, then this is good news; the editor thought it worth considering for their journal so you are in the zone both in study quality and in choice of journal. Read the peer reviewer comments. Carefully and non-defensively. Their comments will inform your decision about the next journal. If they identify issues you can fix then fix them and learn from their feedback for your future writing endeavours. If they identify issues you cannot fix, e.g., sample size is too small, then ensure these limitations are noted in the manuscript and consider aiming lower down the journal impact factor food chain. Sometimes editors offer transfer to an associated, generally lower impact factor, journal. Aspects to consider are: (a) how does the impact factor of the proposed journal differ from the planned next target journal? A big difference may mean that accepting the transfer would be aiming too low. (b) Can you afford the Article Processing Charge for the proposed journal? (c) Although it might initially seem like the easy option not involving any manuscript editing, sometimes there is significant re-writing into the new journal style requested of the author immediately the journal is transferred, so review the proposed new journal author guidelines before accepting the transfer. |
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In any event, and especially if the editor rejects without giving any useful feedback, re-read the components which the editor will skim in order to come to an initial view: cover letter, title, abstract and any journal-specific preface sections (e.g., What was known before and what this study adds; implications for practice). Are these in the right scientific voice, and as clear and interesting as possible? |
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Journal Impact Factor: although there are many issues with this metric (see the San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA) [ |
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Audience: are you targeting the right type of journal readership? Will the take-home messages from your paper be both relevant and informative to this audience? Article Processing Charge (APC): increasingly (with the Berlin Declaration [openaccess.mpg.de/Berlin-Declaration], Plan S [ |
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Academic discipline: if you plan to change from e.g., a psychiatry journal to a social sciences journal then that requires a different writing voice, with different assumptions about audience knowledge, which will be more work to revise than for a target journal from the same discipline. |
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Specific journal: identify a possible new target journal, if needed using advice from colleagues. Scan some recent paper titles published by that journal. Are they close enough in focus to your paper that the editor might assess your paper as in scope? Are they using the same language or will targeting the journal involve significant revision? |
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| Read the journal author guidelines and scan recent papers to identify what needs to be edited, which might include |
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Voice: what disciplinary or professional voice does the journal publish in? Can you write in that voice? If not, consider drawing in a new co-author to support. |
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Structure: some journals want very short Introductions, others very long. Make the manuscript feel to the editor like ‘one of our papers’. |
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Fully follow the author guidelines. Delete any sections no longer needed. If there are new sections to complete (e.g., ‘What does this study contribute?’) then give them the same attention as the rest of the text received in its initial development. |
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Spelling: ensure to use British English (‘randomised’) or US English (‘randomized’) as per journal style, and consistently throughout. To supplement your careful proof-reading, set Language in Microsoft Word to ‘English (United Kingdom)’ or ‘English (United States)’ and check spelling. |
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Title: ensure your title looks like other recently-published titles from the target journal. |
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Abstract: this is central, and is the main component that many editors will read before deciding whether to reject or send for review. Ensure it reads like other abstracts of recent papers in the target journal. |
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Examples: ensure you know what country the journal is based in, which might be obvious from title (e.g., |
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References: some journals have a maximum, which might involve significant re-shaping of the content. Ensure references are formatted per journal requirements, which is why you should be using bibliographic software. For the previous submission you may have included some tangentially-relevant references to papers in that journal—delete these. Ensure you have at least three references, including ideally the first citation, to papers published in the target journal in the last two years. |
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Document name: Ensure all traces of the previous journal submission are expunged—do not submit a file named ‘Study for BMJ.docx’ to the British Journal of Psychiatry! Ensure revised cover letter is specific to the new journal. |
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