Why you publish with Red Flower Publication Private Limited
We do not emphasize an open access fee.
Our all journals are indexed or abstracted by several national and international indexing and abstracting services of international repute. The detail of these services is available on the home page of our company’s website link under the heading "Indexing Information".
We do not promise any author acceptance in fewer days.
We decide suitability after completing the review process properly (i.e. Double-Blind Review System) and which is fully depends upon the reviewer's comments.
We convince our authors about indexing information where our journals are indexed or abstracted.
All journals assigned for Print ISSN and Electronic ISSN.
We are the paid member of DOI (Digital Object Identifier) with DOI prefix No.: 10.21088 and this is using in most of our journal articles.
The detail of our all editor-in-chief and editorial board members are displayed on the respective journal page.
We use a dedicated paid plagiarism checking software and all publishing articles are checked thoroughly before starting the process.
Last Updated on 04 October, 2023
Types of Manuscripts and Limits
Original Research
Original Articles are scientific reports of the results of original clinical research. The text is limited to 2700 words, with an abstract, a maximum of 5 tables and figures (total), and up to 40 references.
Special Articles are scientific reports of original research in such areas as economic policy, ethics, law, and health care delivery. The text is limited to 2700 words, with an abstract, a maximum of 5 tables and figures (total), and up to 40 references.
Cases Reports
Brief Reports usually describe one to three patients or a single family. The text is limited to 2000 words, a maximum of 3 tables and figures (total), and up to 25 references. They begin with a brief summary of no more than 100 words.
Clinical Problem-Solving manuscripts consider the step-by-step process of clinical decision making. Information about a patient is presented to an expert clinician or clinicians in stages (indicated by boldface type in the manuscript) to simulate the way such information emerges in clinical practice. The clinician responds (in regular type) as new information is presented, sharing his or her reasoning with the reader. The text should not exceed 2500 words, and there should be no more than 20 references. The use of clinical illustrative materials, such as x-ray films, is encouraged.
Review Articles
Review articles are usually solicited by the editors, but we will consider unsolicited material. All review articles undergo the same peer-review and editorial process as original research reports. They should be written for the general physician, not specialists. Consequently, they may include material that might be considered too introductory for specialists in the field being covered.
Conflicts of Interest: Because the essence of review articles is selection and interpretation of the literature, the Journal expects that the authors of such articles will not have significant financial associations with a company (or its competitor) that makes a product discussed in the article.
Clinical Practice articles are evidence-based reviews of topics relevant to practicing physicians, both primary care providers and specialists. Articles in this series should include the following sections: the clinical problem, strategies and evidence, areas of uncertainty, guidelines from professional societies, and the authors' conclusions and recommendations. The text is limited to 2500 words and a small number of figures and tables. These articles do not include an abstract.
Clinical Therapeutics articles are evidence-based reviews of topics relevant to practicing physicians. The series focuses on clinically oriented information about specific forms of therapy, including drugs, devices, and procedures. Each article in the series begins with a clinical vignette describing a patient with a specified condition for whom the treatment under discussion has been recommended. This vignette is followed by a definition of the clinical problem, a description of the pathophysiology and how the therapy works, clinical evidence, clinical use (including costs), adverse effects, areas of uncertainty, guidelines, and recommendations. The text is limited to 2500 words. These articles do not include an abstract.
Current Concepts articles focus on clinical topics, including those in specialty areas but of wide interest. The text is limited to 2400 words, with a maximum of 4 figures and tables (total), and up to 50 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Drug Therapy articles detail the pharmacology and use of specific drugs or classes of drugs, or the various drugs used to treat particular diseases. The text is limited to 3300 words, with a maximum of 5 figures and tables (total), and up to 100 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Mechanisms of Disease articles discuss the cellular and molecular mechanisms of diseases or categories of diseases. The text is limited to 3000 words, with a maximum of 5 figures and tables (total), and up to 100 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Medical Progress articles provide comprehensive, scholarly overviews of important clinical subjects, with the principal (but not exclusive) focus on developments during the past five years. Each article details how the perception of a disease, disease category, diagnostic approach, or therapeutic intervention has evolved in recent years. The text is limited to 3300 words, with a maximum of 5 tables and figures (total), and up to 100 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Letter to the Editor
Letters to the Editor provide a forum for readers to comment about articles recently published in the Journal, and they are a place to publish concise articles, such as reports of novel cases. Letters to the Editor are considered for publication (subject to editing and abridgment) provided they do not contain material that has been submitted or published elsewhere.
Letters in reference to a Journal article must not exceed 175 words (excluding references), and must be received within three weeks after publication of the article. Letters not related to a Journal article must not exceed 400 words (excluding references).
A letter can have no more than five references and one figure or table.
A letter can be signed by no more than three authors.
You will be asked to include your full address, telephone number, mobile number, and e-mail address. Financial associations or other possible conflicts of interest must be disclosed. You will receive an e-mailed acknowledgment of your submission. Additional information may also be found in our Frequently Asked Questions.
Other Submissions
Editorials usually provide commentary and analysis concerning an article in the issue of the Journal in which they appear. They may include 1 figure or table. They are nearly always solicited, although unsolicited editorials may occasionally be considered. Editorials are limited to 750 words, with up to 10 references.
Perspective articles cover a wide variety of topics of current interest in health care, medicine, and the intersection between medicine and society. We welcome submissions and proposals. Perspective articles are limited to 1000 to 1200 words and usually include one figure. There is a maximum of 5 references.
Sounding Board articles are opinion essays. They are similar to editorials but are not tied to a particular article. They often present opinions on health policy issues and are normally unsolicited. The text is limited to 2000 words.
Clinical Implications of Basic Research articles discuss single papers from preclinical journals. The purpose is to explain the findings and comment on their possible clinical applications in fewer than 750 words. There may be 1 figure and up to 5 references. We do not consider unsolicited manuscripts in this category.
Special Reports are miscellaneous articles of special interest to the medical community. They are limited to 2700 words.
Health Law, Ethics, and Human Rights are nearly always solicited, but we are willing to consider unsolicited manuscripts or proposals for manuscripts.
Health Policy Reports are nearly always solicited, but we are willing to consider unsolicited manuscripts or proposals for manuscripts.
Occasional Notes are accounts of personal experiences or descriptions of material from outside the usual areas of medical research and analysis.
Images in Clinical Medicine are classic images of common medical conditions. Images are an important part of much of what we do and learn in medicine. This feature is intended to capture the sense of visual discovery and variety that physicians experience. Images in Clinical Medicine are not intended as a vehicle for case reports.
Filler Photographs are unsolicited photographs, unrelated to the content of the Journal, that are published as space allows. There are no restrictions on subject matter, however photographs of recognizable people are not generally published.
Requirements:
Photo files must be submitted in JPEG format and have a file extension of .jpg or .jpeg.
Photos must be 1000 x 1000 pixels minimum to be considered for publication. To be eligible to be printed at the largest size, images should be 1730 pixels wide by 2000 pixels high or larger.
Photo files may be up to 10 MB in size.
A maximum of five photos may be uploaded per session.
After submitting a photo you will be notified by email once it has been reviewed by our editors. You will also receive email notification if your photo is selected for publication.
Last Updated on 04 October, 2023
Preparaon of the Manuscript
Covering Letter
Prepare the title page, covering letter, acknowledgement, etc. using a word processor program. All information which can reveal your identity should be here.
The text of observational and experimental articles should be divided into sections with the headings: Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion, References, Tables, Figures, Figure legends, and Acknowledgment. Do not make subheadings in these sections.
Title Page
The title page should carry
Type of manuscript (e.g. Original article, Review article, Case Report etc.);
The title of the article, which should be concise, but informative;
Running title or short title not more than 50 characters;
The name by which each contributor is known (Last name, First name and initials of middle name), with his or her highest academic degree(s) and institutional affiliation;
The name of the department(s) and institution(s) to which the work should be attributed;
The name, address, phone numbers, mobile numbers and e-mail address of the contributor responsible for correspondence about the manuscript;
The total number of pages, total number of photographs and word counts separately for abstract and for the text (excluding the references and abstract);
Source(s) of support in the form of grants, equipment, drugs, or all of these;
Acknowledgement, if any; and
If the manuscript was presented as part of a meeting, the organization, place, and exact date on which it was read.
Abstract Page
The second page should carry the full title of the manuscript and an abstract (of no more than 150 words for case reports, brief reports and 250 words for original articles). The abstract should be structured and state the Context (Background), Aims, Settings and Design, Methods and Material, Statistical analysis used, Results and Conclusions. Below the abstract should provide 3 to 10 keyword.
Introduction
State the purpose of the article and summarize the rationale for the study or observation.
Methods
The methods section should include only information that was available at the time the plan or protocol for the study was written; all information obtained during the conduct of the study belongs in the Results section.
Reports of randomized clinical trials should be based on the CONSORT Statement. When reporting experiments on human subjects, indicate whether the procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation (institutional or regional) and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2013.
Results
Present your results in logical sequence in the text, tables, and illustrations, giving the main or most important findings first. Do not repeat in the text all the data in the tables or illustrations; emphasize or summarize only important observations. Extra or supplementary materials and technical detail can be placed in an appendix where it will be accessible but will not interrupt the flow of the text; alternatively, it can be published only in the electronic version of the journal.
Discussion
Include Summary of key findings (primary outcome measures, secondary outcome measures, results as they relate to a prior hypothesis); Strengths and limitations of the study (study question, study design, data collection, analysis and interpretation); Interpretation and implications in the context of the totality of evidence (is there a systematic review to refer to, if not, could one be reasonably done here and now?, what this study adds to the available evidence, effects on patient care and health policy, possible mechanisms); Controversies raised by this study; and Future research directions (for this particular research collaboration, underlying mechanisms, clinical research). Do not repeat in detail data or other material given in the Introduction or the Results section.
References
List references in alphabetical order. Each listed reference should be cited in text (not in alphabetic order), and each text citation should be listed in the References section. Identify references in text, tables, and legends by Arabic numerals in square bracket (e.g. [10]). Please refer to ICMJE Guidelines for more examples.
Standard journal article
[1] Flink H, Tegelberg Å, Thörn M, Lagerlöf F. Effect of oral iron supplementation on unstimulated salivary flow rate: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. J Oral Pathol Med 2006;35:540-7.
[2] Twetman S, Axelsson S, Dahlgren H, Holm AK, Källestål C, Lagerlöf F, et al. Caries-preventive effect of fluoride toothpaste: A systematic review. Acta Odontol Scand 2003;61:347-55.
Article in supplement or special issue
[3] Fleischer W, Reimer K. Povidone iodine antisepsis. State of the art. Dermatology 1997;195 Suppl 2:3-9.
Corporate (collective) author
[4] American Academy of Periodontology. Sonic and ultrasonic scalers in periodontics. J Periodontol 2000;71:1792-801.
Unpublished article
[5] Garoushi S, Lassila LV, Tezvergil A, Vallittu PK. Static and fatigue compression test for particulate filler composite resin with fiber-reinforced composite substructure. Dent Mater 2006.
Personal author(s)
[6] Hosmer D, Lemeshow S. Applied logistic regression, 2nd edn. New York: Wiley-Interscience; 2000.
Chapter in book
[7] Nauntofte B, Tenovuo J, Lagerlöf F. Secretion and composition of saliva. In: Fejerskov O, Kidd EAM, editors. Dental caries: The disease and its clinical management. Oxford: Blackwell Munksgaard; 2003. p. 7-27.
No author given
[8] World Health Organization. Oral health surveys - basic methods, 4th edn. Geneva: World Health Organization; 1997.
Reference from electronic media
[9] National Statistics Online—Trends in suicide by method in England and Wales, 1979-2001. www.statistics.gov.uk/downloads/theme_health/HSQ 20.pdf (accessed Jan 24, 2005): 7-18. Only verified references against the original documents should be cited. Authors are responsible for the accuracy and completeness of their references and for correct text citation. The number of reference should be kept limited to 20 in case of major communications and 10 for short communications.
More information about other reference types is available at, but observes some minor deviations (no full stop after journal title, no issue or date after volume, etc).
Tables
Tables should be self-explanatory and should not duplicate textual material.
Tables with more than 10 columns and 25 rows are not acceptable.
Number tables, in Arabic numerals, consecutively in the order of their first citation in the text and supply a brief title for each.
Explain in footnotes all non-standard abbreviations that are used in each table.
For footnotes use the following symbols, in this sequence: *, ¶, †, ‡‡,
Illustrations (Figures)
Graphics files are welcome if supplied as Tiff, EPS, or PowerPoint files of minimum 1200x1600 pixel size. The minimum line weight for line art is 0.5 point for optimal printing.
When possible, please place symbol legends below the figure instead of to the side.
Original color figures can be printed in color at the editor's and publisher's discretion provided the author agrees to pay
Type or print out legends (maximum 40 words, excluding the credit line) for illustrations using double spacing, with Arabic numerals corresponding to the illustrations.
Sending a revised manuscript
While submitting a revised manuscript, contributors are requested to include, along with single copy of the final revised manuscript, a photocopy of the revised manuscript with the changes underlined in red and copy of the comments with the point to point clarification to each comment. The manuscript number should be written on each of these documents. If the manuscript is submitted online, the contributors’ form and copyright transfer form has to be submitted in original with the signatures of all the contributors within two weeks of submission. Hard copies of images should be sent to the office of the journal. There is no need to send printed manuscript for articles submitted online.
Reprints
Journal provides no free printed reprints, however an author copy is sent to the main author and additional copies are available on payment (ask to the journal office).
Copyrights
The whole of the literary matter in the journal is copyright protected and cannot be reproduced without the written permission of the publisher.
Copyright Form can be downloaded from the DOWNLOADS section
Declaration
A declaration should be submitted stating that the manuscript represents valid work and that neither this manuscript nor one with substantially similar content under the present authorship has been published or is being considered for publication elsewhere and the authorship of this article will not be contested by anyone whose name (s) is/are not listed here, and that the order of authorship as placed in the manuscript is final and accepted by the co-authors. Declarations should be signed by all the authors in the order in which they are mentioned in the original manuscript. Matters appearing in the Journal are covered by copyright but no objection will be made to their reproduction provided permission is obtained from the Editor prior to publication and due acknowledgment of the source is made.
Declaration Form can be downloaded from the DOWNLOADS section
Abbreviations
Standard abbreviations should be used and be spelt out when first used in the text. Abbreviations should not be used in the title or abstract.
Checklist
Manuscript Title
Covering letter
Signed by all contributors
Previous publication/ presentations mentioned Source of funding mentioned
Conflicts of interest disclosed
Authors
Middle name initials provided.
Author for correspondence, with e-mail address provided.
Number of contributors restricted as per the instructions
Identity not revealed in paper except title page {e.g. name of the institute in Methods, citing previous study as ‘our study’)
Presentation and Format
Double spacing
Margins 2.5 cm from all four sides
Title page contains all the desired information. Running title provided (not more than 50 characters)
Abstract page contains the full title of the manuscript
Abstract provided: Structured abstract provided for an original article.
Key words provided (three or more)
Introduction of 75-100 words
Headings in title case (not ALL CAPITALS). References cited in square brackets
References according to the journal's instructions
Language and grammar
Uniformly American English
Abbreviations spelt out in full for the first time. Numerals from 1 to l0 spelt out
Numerals at the beginning of the sentence spelt out
Tables and figures
No repetition of data in tables and graphs and in text.
Actual numbers from which graphs drawn, provided.
Figures necessary and of good quality (color)
Table and figure numbers in Arabic letters (not Roman).
Labels pasted on back of the photographs (no names written), in case of printed manuscript
Figure legends provided (not more than 40 words)
Patients' privacy maintained, (if not permission taken)
Credit note for borrowed figures/tables provided
Manuscript provided with double spacing
Submitting the Manuscript
Is the journal editor’s contact information current?
Is a cover letter included with the manuscript?
Does the letter include the author’s postal address, e-mail address, telephone number, and mobile number for future correspondence?
State that the manuscript is original, not previously published, and not under concurrent consideration elsewhere?
Is Informed the journal editor of the existence of any similar published manuscripts written by the author?
Mention any supplemental material you are submitting for the online version of your article?
Last Updated on 04 October, 2023
Author Agreement form for contributors
The form below is for contributors to the journal to complete and submit once it is confirmed that their submission will be published in a forthcoming issue. It is also intended for contributors to prior issues who have not yet filled out an author agreement form. Please take care to fill out this form correctly, as there are no warnings on incomplete fields; and if done incorrectly it will need to be recompleted.
Please download all these documents and return scanned copies of completed and duly signed by all authors must be e-mail to us.
In case you made this article from your thesis; please download this document ‘Undertaking Article Made From Thesis’ and return completed and duly signed by all authors through email to us.
Send the Corrected Proof, and Subscriptions (If any) with covering letter in a single envelope to the following address.
The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing, and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals (ICMJE Recommendations 2018) recommend that authorship be based on the following four criteria:
• Substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work; or the acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data for the work; AND
• Drafting the work or revising it critically for important intellectual content; AND
• Final approval of the version to be published; AND
• Agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.
In addition to being accountable for the parts of the work he or she has done, an author should be able to identify which co-authors are responsible for specific other parts of the work. In addition, authors should have confidence in the integrity of the contributions of their co-authors.
We include only one corresponding author per article. Any further contribution details (eg, equal contribution) must be included in the contributors or acknowledgement sections at the end of the article.
The RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS requires that all those designated as authors should meet all four ICMJE criteria for authorship, and all who meet the four criteria should be identified as authors. We recognise only natural persons over 18 years of age as authors. These authorship criteria are intended to reserve the status of authorship for those who deserve credit and can take responsibility for the work. The criteria are not intended for use as a means to disqualify colleagues from authorship who otherwise meet authorship criteria by denying them the opportunity to meet criterion #s 2 or 3. Therefore, all individuals who meet the first criterion should have the opportunity to participate in the review, drafting, and final approval of the manuscript.
The individuals who conduct the work are responsible for identifying who meets these criteria and ideally should do so when planning the work, making modifications as appropriate as the work progresses. The corresponding author takes primary responsibility for communication with the journal during the manuscript submission, peer review, and publication process, and typically ensures that all the journal’s administrative requirements, such as providing details of authorship, ethics committee approval, clinical trial registration documentation, and gathering conflict of interest forms and statements, are properly completed, although these duties may be delegated to one or more co-authors.
When a large multi-author group has conducted the work, the group ideally should decide who will be an author before the work is started and confirm who is an author before submitting the manuscript for publication. All members of the group named as authors should meet all four criteria for authorship, including approval of the final manuscript, and they should be able to take public responsibility for the work and should have full confidence in the accuracy and integrity of the work of other group authors. They will also be expected as individuals to complete conflict-of-interest disclosure forms.
The by line of the article identifies who is directly responsible for the manuscript, and Medline lists as authors whichever names appear on the by line. If the by line includes a group name, Medline will list the names of individual group members who are authors or who are collaborators, sometimes called non-author contributors, if there is a note associated with the by line clearly stating that the individual names are elsewhere in the paper and whether those names are authors or collaborators.
At The RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS we want authors to assure us that all authors included on a paper fulfil the criteria of authorship. In addition we want assurance that there is no one else who fulfils the criteria but has not been included as an author.
When we encounter disagreements among authors we follow guidance from the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE)—see here and here.
Contributorship
The RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS lists contributors in two ways. Firstly, we publish a list of authors' names at the beginning of the paper and, secondly, we list contributors (some of whom may not be included as authors) at the end of the paper, giving details of who did what in planning, conducting, and reporting the work. This is a good place to include contributions by patients or members of the public who have assisted as research volunteers, giving their names and specific roles. We encourage authors to fully acknowledge the contribution of patients and the public to their research where appropriate.
One or more of these contributors are listed as guarantors of the paper. The guarantor accepts full responsibility for the work and/or the conduct of the study, had access to the data, and controlled the decision to publish.
Contributorship and guarantorship are concepts that were applied first to original research papers, and are sometimes hard to define for other articles. Each contributorship statement should make clear who has contributed what to the planning, conduct, and reporting of the work described in the article, and should identify one, or occasionally more, contributor(s) as being responsible for the overall content as guarantor(s). For articles in The RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS that do not report original research - such as editorials, clinical reviews, and education and debate - please state who had the idea for the article, who performed the literature search, who wrote the article, and who is the guarantor (the contributor who accepts full responsibility for the finished article, had access to any data, and controlled the decision to publish). For non-research articles that include case reports such as lessons of the week, drug points, and interactive case reports, please also state who identified and/or managed the case(s).
Researchers must determine among themselves the precise nature of each person's contribution, and we encourage open discussion among all participants.
Alteration to authorship or contributorship
Any change in authors and/or contributors after initial submission must be approved by all authors. This applies to additions, deletions, change of order to the authors, or contributions being attributed differently. Any alterations must be explained to the editor. The editor may contact any of the authors and/or contributors to ascertain whether they have agreed to any alteration.
Group authorship
If there is a very large number of authors we may ask for confirmation that everyone listed met the ICMJE criteria for authorship. If they did, we may then require that the authors form a group whose name will appear in the article by line.
We appreciate that authors may be concerned that their work will not be properly recognised if they form a group, but this is unfounded. Medline guidance can handle group authorship and still give each individual due credit:
"When a group name for a specific consortium, committee, study group, or the like appears in an article by line, the personal names of the members of that group may be published in the article text. Such names are entered as collaborator names for the Medline citation."
Key points:
• A Medline citation may contain an array of personal author names, group (or corporate) author names, and collaborator names.
• Personal author names are included in Medline when the author names appear in the article by line, or are explicitly identified anywhere else in the text of the article as the authors or as the members of the writing group or writing committee for the article.
• Group author names (also known as corporate, organization or collective names) are included in Medline when such names appear in the article by line.
• When a group name for a specific consortium, committee, study group, or the like appears in an article by line, the personal names of the members of that group may be published in the article text. Such names are entered as collaborator names for the Medline citation.
• Collaborator names are entered for a Medline citation only when a group (corporate) author name is present for the citation.
• More than one group name may appear for a citation, and a group name may appear along with personal author names.
• For articles that represent a formal guideline or practice guideline, the name of the guideline-issuing body is entered as a group name for the Medline citation, even if that name does not appear in the article by line.
What this means for The RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS's authors
a) if authors form a group for the article's main by line they will also be listed individually:
• As collaborators in the article's Medline/PubMed record;
• As authors in a group authorship statement at the end of the article on the rfppl.co.in; and
• As contributors in the contributorship statement at the end of the article on the rfppl.co.in.
b) however, for The RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS's research articles with many authors, where those authors do not opt to form a group, we will not be able to publish a RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS pico in the print issue of The RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS. Such research articles will be for online only (the rfppl.co.in) publication only.
Last Updated on 04 October, 2023
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For purchase of reprints, printable PDF or commercial reuse please contact Red Flower Publications or the executive editor of the journal.
All material published in the journal undergoes peer review to ensure fair balance, objectivity, independence, and relevance to educational need. Neither the editors of Journal title, nor its publishers, nor any other party involved in the preparation of material contained in represent or warrants that the information contained herein is in every respect accurate or complete, and they are not responsible for any errors or omissions or for the results obtained from the use of such material. Patients and consumers reading articles posted on the website of Journal title should review the information carefully with their professional healthcare provider. The information is not intended to replace medical advice offered by the physicians. Journal title and its publishers make no representations or warranties with respect to any treatment, action, or application of medication or preparation by any person following the information offered or provided. The Journal title and its publishers will not be liable for any direct, indirect, consequential, special, exemplary, or other damages arising there from.
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This may contain links to web sites operated by other parties. These links are provided purely for educational purpose. Such links do not imply Journal title's endorsement of material on any other site and disclaims all liability with regard to your access of such linked web sites.
Author Agreement form for contributors
The form below is for contributors to the journal to complete and submit once it is confirmed that their submission will be published in a forthcoming issue. It is also intended for contributors to prior issues who have not yet filled out an author agreement form. Please take care to fill out this form correctly, as there are no warnings on incomplete fields; and if done incorrectly it will need to be recompleted.
Please download all these documents and return scanned copies of completed and duly signed by all authors must be e-mail to us.
In case you made this article from your thesis; please download this document ‘Undertaking Article Made From Thesis’ and return completed and duly signed by all authors through email to us.
Send the Corrected Proof, and Subscriptions (If any) with covering letter in a single envelope to the following address.
The authors are encouraged to suggest individuals who specialize in the topic(s) your manuscript to be considered to review. You may suggest maximum of 5 reviewers, with full contact details including phone numbers, mobile number and email address.
First Page File: Prepare the title page, covering letter, acknowledgement, etc. using a word processor program. All information which can reveal your identity should be here. Use text/rtf/doc files. Do not zip the files.
Article file: The main text of the article, beginning from Abstract till References (including tables) should be in this file. Do not include any information (such as acknowledgement, your name in page headers, etc.) in this file. Use text/rtf/doc files. Do not zip the files. Limit the file size to 400 kb. Do not incorporate images in the file. If file size is large, graphs can be submitted as images separately without incorporating them in the article file to reduce the size of the file.
Images: Submit good quality color images. Each image should be less than 100 kb in size. Size of the image can be reduced by decreasing the actual height and width of the images (keep up to 400 pixels or 3 inches). All image formats (jpeg, tiff, gif, bmp, png, eps etc.) are acceptable; jpeg is most suitable.
Legends: Legends for the figures/images should be included at the end of the article file.
If the manuscript is submitted online, the contributors' form and copyright transfer form has to be submitted in original with the signatures of all the contributors within two weeks from submission. No need of hard copies of the images, if articles submitted online or sent through e-mail.
All messages and reviews sent electronically will be acknowledged electronically upon receipt. Please supply any information you think may be helpful in replying electronically. If you do not receive an acknowledgement one week after submission, assume that the message did not reach the editorial office of the journal. Please wait and do not send multiple messages, because it takes much work to eliminate double mail.
Note : e-mails with the forcibly consideration, multiple queries on status, vicious language, offensive writings to Editor/Associate Editors will lead to rejection of Manuscript.
Red Flower Publication recognizes the importance of the integrity and completeness of the scholarly record to researchers and librarians and attaches the highest importance to maintaining trust in the authority of its electronic archive.
Red Flower Publication's policy
It is a general principle of scholarly communication that the editor of a learned journal is solely and independently responsible for deciding which articles submitted to the journal shall be published. In making this decision the editor is guided by policies of the journal's editorial board and constrained by such legal requirements in force regarding libel, copyright infringement and plagiarism. An outcome of this principle is the importance of the scholarly archive as a permanent, historic record of the transactions of scholarship. Articles that have been published shall remain extant, exact and unaltered as far as is possible. However, very occasionally circumstances may arise where an article is published that must later be retracted or even removed. Such actions must not be undertaken lightly and can only occur under exceptional circumstances.
This policy has been designed to address these concerns and to take into account current best practice in the scholarly and library communities. As standards evolve and change, we will revisit this issue and welcome the input of scholarly and library communities. We believe these issues require international standards and we will be active in lobbying various information bodies to establish international standards and best practices that the publishing and information industries can adopt.
Article Withdrawal
Only used for Articles in Press which represent early versions of articles and sometimes contain errors, or may have been accidentally submitted twice. Occasionally, but less frequently, the articles may represent infringements of professional ethical codes, such as multiple submission, bogus claims of authorship, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data or the like. Articles in Press (articles that have been accepted for publication but which have not been formally published and will not yet have the complete volume/issue/page information) that include errors, or are discovered to be accidental duplicates of other published article(s), or are determined to violate our journal publishing ethics guidelines in the view of the editors (such as multiple submission, bogus claims of authorship, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data or the like), may be "Withdrawn" from us. Withdrawn means that the article content (HTML and PDF) is removed and replaced with a HTML page and PDF simply stating that the article has been withdrawn according to the Red Flower Publication Policy on Article in Press Withdrawal with a link to the current policy document.
Article Retraction
Infringements of professional ethical codes, such as multiple submission, bogus claims of authorship, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data or the like. Occasionally a retraction will be used to correct errors in submission or publication. The retraction of an article by its authors or the editor under the advice of members of the scholarly community has long been an occasional feature of the learned world. Standards for dealing with retractions have been developed by a number of library and scholarly bodies, and this best practice is adopted for article retraction by Red Flower Publications:
A retraction note titled "Retraction: [article title]" signed by the authors and/or the editor is published in the paginated part of a subsequent issue of the journal and listed in the contents list.
In the electronic version, a link is made to the original article.
The online article is preceded by a screen containing the retraction note. It is to this screen that the link resolves; the reader can then proceed to the article itself.
The original article is retained unchanged save for a watermark on the .pdf indicating on each page that it is "retracted."
The HTML version of the document is removed.
Article Removal: Legal limitations
In an extremely limited number of cases, it may be necessary to remove an article from the online database. This will only occur where the article is clearly defamatory, or infringes others legal rights, or where the article is, or we have good reason to expect it will be, the subject of a court order, or where the article, if acted upon, might pose a serious health risk. In these circumstances, while the metadata (Title and Authors) will be retained, the text will be replaced with a screen indicating the article has been removed for legal reasons.
Article Replacement
In cases where the article, if acted upon, might pose a serious health risk, the authors of the original article may wish to retract the flawed original and replace it with a corrected version. In these circumstances the procedures for retraction will be followed with the difference that the database retraction notice will publish a link to the corrected re-published article and a history of the document.
Red Flower Publication Journals are dedicated to following best practices on ethical matters, errors and retractions. The prevention of publication malpractice is one of the important responsibilities of the editorial board. Any kind of unethical behavior is not acceptable, and Red Flower Publication does not tolerate plagiarism in any form. Authors submitting articles to Red Flower Publication Journals affirm that manuscript contents are original.
As such, Red Flower journals follow the COPE Code of Conduct and Best Practice Guidelines for Journal Editors and the Code of Conduct for Journal Publishers.
In addition, as a journal that follows the ICMJE’s Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals, it is expected of authors, reviewers and editors that they follow the best-practice guidelines on ethical behaviour contained therein.
A selection of key points is included below, but you should always refer to the three documents listed above for full details.
Duties of Editors
Fair play and editorial independence
Editors evaluate submitted manuscripts exclusively on the basis of their academic merit (importance, originality, study’s validity, clarity) and its relevance to the journal’s scope, without regard to the authors’ race, gender, sexual orientation, ethnic origin, citizenship, religious belief, political philosophy or institutional affiliation. Decisions to edit and publish are not determined by the policies of governments or any other agencies outside of the journal itself. The Editor-in-Chief has full authority over the entire editorial content of the journal and the timing of publication of that content.
Confidentiality
Editors and editorial staff will not disclose any information about a submitted manuscript to anyone other than the corresponding author, reviewers, potential reviewers, other editorial advisers, and the publisher, as appropriate.
Disclosure and conflicts of interest
Editors and editorial board members will not use unpublished information disclosed in a submitted manuscript for their own research purposes without the authors’ explicit written consent. Privileged information or ideas obtained by editors as a result of handling the manuscript will be kept confidential and not used for their personal advantage. Editors will recuse themselves from considering manuscripts in which they have conflicts of interest resulting from competitive, collaborative, or other relationships/connections with any of the authors, companies or institutions connected to the papers; instead, they will ask another member of the editorial board to handle the manuscript.
Publication decisions
The editors ensure that all submitted manuscripts being considered for publication undergo peer-review by at least two reviewers who are expert in the field. The Editor-in-Chief is responsible for deciding which of the manuscripts submitted to the journal will be published, based on the validation of the work in question, its importance to researchers and readers, the reviewers’ comments, and such legal requirements as are currently in force regarding libel, copyright infringement and plagiarism. The Editor-in-Chief may confer with other editors or reviewers in making this decision.
Involvement and cooperation in investigations
Editors (in conjunction with the publisher and/or society) will take responsive measures when ethical concerns are raised with regard to a submitted manuscript or published paper. Every reported act of unethical publishing behavior will be looked into, even if it is discovered years after publication. Red Flower Publication follow the COPE Flowcharts when dealing with cases of suspected misconduct. If, on investigation, the ethical concern is well-founded, a correction, retraction, expression of concern or other note as may be relevant will be published in the journal.
Duties of Reviewers
Contribution to editorial decisions
Peer review assists editors in making editorial decisions and, through editorial communications with authors, may assist authors in improving their manuscripts. Peer review is an essential component of formal scholarly communication and lies at the heart of scientific endeavor. Red Flower Publication shares the view of many that all scholars who wish to contribute to the scientific process have an obligation to do a fair share of reviewing.
Promptness
Any invited referee who feels unqualified to review the research reported in a manuscript or knows that its prompt review will be impossible should immediately notify the editors and decline the invitation to review so that alternative reviewers can be contacted.
Confidentiality
Any manuscripts received for review are confidential documents and must be treated as such; they must not be shown to or discussed with others except if authorized by the Editor-in-Chief (who would only do so under exceptional and specific circumstances). This applies also to invited reviewers who decline the review invitation.
Standards of objectivity
Reviews should be conducted objectively and observations formulated clearly with supporting arguments so that authors can use them for improving the manuscript. Personal criticism of the authors is inappropriate.
Acknowledgment of sources
Reviewers should identify relevant published work that has not been cited by the authors. Any statement that is an observation, derivation or argument that has been reported in previous publications should be accompanied by the relevant citation. A reviewer should also notify the editors of any substantial similarity or overlap between the manuscript under consideration and any other manuscript (published or unpublished) of which they have personal knowledge.
Disclosure and conflicts of interest
Any invited referee who has conflicts of interest resulting from competitive, collaborative, or other relationships or connections with any of the authors, companies or institutions connected to the manuscript and the work described therein should immediately notify the editors to declare their conflicts of interest and decline the invitation to review so that alternative reviewers can be contacted.
Unpublished material disclosed in a submitted manuscript must not be used in a reviewer’s own research without the express written consent of the authors. Privileged information or ideas obtained through peer review must be kept confidential and not used for the reviewer’s personal advantage. This applies also to invited reviewers who decline the review invitation.
Duties of Authors
Reporting standards
Authors of original research should present an accurate account of the work performed and the results, followed by an objective discussion of the significance of the work. The manuscript should contain sufficient detail and references to permit others to replicate the work. Review articles should be accurate, objective and comprehensive, while editorial 'opinion' or perspective pieces should be clearly identified as such. Fraudulent or knowingly inaccurate statements constitute unethical behavior and are unacceptable.
Data access and retention
Authors may be asked to provide the raw data of their study together with the manuscript for editorial review and should be prepared to make the data publicly available if practicable. In any event, authors should ensure accessibility of such data to other competent professionals for at least 10 years after publication (preferably via an institutional or subject-based data repository or other data center), provided that the confidentiality of the participants can be protected and legal rights concerning proprietary data do not preclude their release.
Originality and plagiarism
Authors should ensure that they have written and submit only entirely original works, and if they have used the work and/or words of others, that this has been appropriately cited. Publications that have been influential in determining the nature of the work reported in the manuscript should also be cited. Plagiarism takes many forms, from "passing off" another's paper as the author's own, to copying or paraphrasing substantial parts of another's paper (without attribution), to claiming results from research conducted by others. Plagiarism in all its forms constitutes unethical publishing behavior and is unacceptable.
Multiple, duplicate, redundant or concurrent submission/publication
Papers describing essentially the same research should not be published in more than one journal or primary publication. Hence, authors should not submit for consideration a manuscript that has already been published in another journal. Submission of a manuscript concurrently to more than one journal is unethical publishing behavior and unacceptable.
The publication of some kinds of articles (such as clinical guidelines, translations) in more than one journal is sometimes justifiable, provided that certain conditions are met. The authors and editors of the journals concerned must agree to the secondary publication, which must reflect the same data and interpretation of the primary document. The primary reference must be cited in the secondary publication.
Authorship of the manuscript
Only persons who meet these authorship criteria should be listed as authors in the manuscript as they must be able to take public responsibility for the content: (i) made significant contributions to the conception, design, execution, data acquisition, or analysis/interpretation of the study; and (ii) drafted the manuscript or revised it critically for important intellectual content; and (iii) have seen and approved the final version of the paper and agreed to its submission for publication. All persons who made substantial contributions to the work reported in the manuscript (such as technical help, writing and editing assistance, general support) but who do not meet the criteria for authorship must not be listed as an author, but should be acknowledged in the "Acknowledgments" section after their written permission to be named as been obtained. The corresponding author should ensure that all appropriate coauthors (according to the above definition) and no inappropriate coauthors are included in the author list and verify that all coauthors have seen and approved the final version of the manuscript and agreed to its submission for publication.
Disclosure and conflicts of interest
Authors should—at the earliest stage possible (generally by submitting a disclosure form at the time of submission and including a statement in the manuscript)—disclose any conflicts of interest that might be construed to influence the results or their interpretation in the manuscript. Examples of potential conflicts of interest that should be disclosed include financial ones such as honoraria, educational grants or other funding, participation in speakers’ bureaus, membership, employment, consultancies, stock ownership, or other equity interest, and paid expert testimony or patent-licensing arrangements, as well as non-financial ones such as personal or professional relationships, affiliations, knowledge or beliefs in the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript. All sources of financial support for the work should be disclosed (including the grant number or other reference number if any).
Acknowledgment of sources
Authors should ensure that they have properly acknowledged the work of others, and should also cite publications that have been influential in determining the nature of the reported work. Information obtained privately (from conversation, correspondence or discussion with third parties) must not be used or reported without explicit, written permission from the source. Authors should not use information obtained in the course of providing confidential services, such as refereeing manuscripts or grant applications, unless they have obtained the explicit written permission of the author(s) of the work involved in these services.
Hazards and human or animal subjects
If the work involves chemicals, procedures or equipment that have any unusual hazards inherent in their use, the authors must clearly identify these in the manuscript. If the work involves the use of animals or human participants, the authors should ensure that all procedures were performed in compliance with relevant laws and institutional guidelines and that the appropriate institutional committee(s) has approved them; the manuscript should contain a statement to this effect. Authors should also include a statement in the manuscript that informed consent was obtained for experimentation with human participants. The privacy rights of human participants must always be observed.
Peer review
Authors are obliged to participate in the peer review process and cooperate fully by responding promptly to editors’ requests for raw data, clarifications, and proof of ethics approval, patient consents and copyright permissions. In the case of a first decision of "revisions necessary", authors should respond to the reviewers’ comments systematically, point by point, and in a timely manner, revising and re-submitting their manuscript to the journal by the deadline given.
Fundamental errors in published works
When authors discover significant errors or inaccuracies in their own published work, it is their obligation to promptly notify the journal’s editors or publisher and cooperate with them to either correct the paper in the form of an erratum or to retract the paper. If the editors or publisher learns from a third party that a published work contains a significant error or inaccuracy, then it is the authors’ obligation to promptly correct or retract the paper or provide evidence to the journal editors of the correctness of the paper. For guidelines on retracting or correcting articles, please click here:
http://rfppl.co.in/article_submission_system.php?mid=5#articlewithdrawal.
Duties of the Publisher
Handling of unethical publishing behavior
In cases of alleged or proven scientific misconduct, fraudulent publication or plagiarism, the publisher, in close collaboration with the editors, will take all appropriate measures to clarify the situation and to amend the article in question. This includes the prompt publication of an erratum, clarification or, in the most severe case, the retraction of the affected work. The publisher, together with the editors, shall take reasonable steps to identify and prevent the publication of papers where research misconduct has occurred, and under no circumstances encourage such misconduct or knowingly allow such misconduct to take place.
Access to journal content
The publisher is committed to the permanent availability and preservation of scholarly research and ensures accessibility by partnering with organizations and maintaining our own digital archive. For details on Red Flower Publication’s archiving policy, please click here:
http://rfppl.co.in/archiveJournal.php?mid=21.
Advertising Policy
All advertisements are subject to approval of the Red Flower Publication, which reserves the right to reject or cancel any ad at any time.
All advertisements are accepted and published by Publisher on the warranty of the agency and advertiser that both are authorized to publish the entire contents and subject matter of the advertisement.
In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the advertiser and the agency, jointly and severally, agree to indemnify and hold harmless Publisher, its officers, agents and employees against expenses (including legal fees) and losses resulting from the publication of the contents of the advertisement, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright infringement or plagiarism.
Publisher will not be liable for any failure to publish any advertisement accepted by Publisher; however, Publisher shall use its reasonable efforts to place such advertisement in subsequent available space.
All advertisements must clearly and prominently identify the advertiser by trademark or signature.
For advertorial guidelines contact your Sales Manager.
Any references to Publisher or its products or services in advertisements, promotional material or merchandising by the advertiser or agency are subject to Publisher’s written approval for such use.
All advertising contract position clauses are treated as requests. Publisher cannot guarantee fixed positioning.
Publisher is not responsible for incidental or consequential damage for errors in displaying or printing an ad.
Publisher may change the terms set forth herein at any time, provided that no such change applies to ads whose closing date precedes the announcement of the change.
Publisher will not be bound by any condition, printed or otherwise, appearing on any insertion order or copy instructions when such conditions conflict with the conditions set forth in this rate card.
In the event of nonpayment, Publisher reserves the right to hold advertiser and/or its advertising agency jointly and severally liable for such monies as are past due and payable to Publisher.
Proprietary names of pharmaceutical products must be accompanied by the chemical, generic or official name; the quantity of all active substances must be stated along with the recommended dosage. New ad copy and creative for pharmaceutical products should be sent to the advertising department. Please allow two weeks for clearance.
All advertisements must be clearly germane to the practice of medicine.
Advertiser represents and warrants that all advertisements and pharmaceutical products they advertise are compliant with all applicable laws, rules, and regulations in the country where the advertisement will be seen. Advertisements for pharmaceutical products (including NDA products) that are subject to India Food and Drug Administration (FDA) oversight must comply with FDA regulations regarding advertising and promotion.
Any use of Publisher’s trademarks and its logo design, or copyrighted material for links to and from a Publisher website must be approved in advance by Publisher. Publisher does not endorse or support any product or organization linked to its website, nor is Publisher responsible for the content of any website promoted in any advertisement appearing at a Publisher website.
All advertisements at RFPPL.CO.IN served on article pages are served on a random basis, in rotation with Red Flower Publication advertising and recruitment advertising. The random placement algorithm does not permit any commercial ad to be targeted to any specific article or any specific user or groups of users. Advertisers have no advance knowledge of and no control over ad placement. Neither the Publisher nor its publications endorse any company, product, or service.
Recruitment ads must be nondiscriminatory and comply with all applicable laws and regulations. Ads that discriminate against applicants based on sex, age, race, religion, marital status or physical handicap will not be accepted. Non-India recruitment advertisers are required to confirm in writing that they are equal opportunity employers.
Online Cancellation Policies
Advertiser may cancel the entire Insertion Order, or any portion thereof, as follows: Run-Of-Site Banner Programs:
On written notice to Publisher given 21 or more days before the start date. With cancellations inside 21 days of the start date, advertiser will be responsible for 50% of the Insertion Order amount that was reserved for delivery.
Flat fee-based or fixed placement programs (including, but not limited to, Roadblocks, Specialty Packs, and other Sponsorships:
On written notice to Publisher given 30 or more days before the start date. With cancellations inside 30 days of the start date, advertiser will be responsible for 50% of the IO amount that was reserved for delivery.
Published statement of Human and Animal Rights
When reporting experiments on human subjects, authors should indicate whether the procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation (institutional and national). If doubt exists whether the research was conducted in accordance with the ethical standards, the authors must explain the rationale for their approach, and demonstrate that the institutional review body explicitly approved the doubtful aspects of the study. When reporting experiments on animals, authors should be asked to indicate whether the institutional and national guide for the care and use of laboratory animals was followed.
Published Statement of Informed Consent
Patients have a right to privacy that should not be infringed without informed consent. Identifying information, including patients' names, initials, or hospital numbers, should not be published in written descriptions, photographs, and pedigrees unless the information is essential for scientific purposes and the patient (or parent or guardian) gives written informed consent for publication. Informed consent for this purpose requires that a patient who is identifiable be shown the manuscript to be published. Authors should identify Individuals who provide writing assistance and disclose the funding source for this assistance.
Identifying details should be omitted if they are not essential. Complete anonymity is difficult to achieve, however, and informed consent should be obtained if there is any doubt. For example, masking the eye region in photographs of patients is inadequate protection of anonymity. If identifying characteristics are altered to protect anonymity, such as in genetic pedigrees, authors should provide assurance that alterations do not distort scientific meaning and editors should so note.
Conflict of Interest Policy
Red Flower Publication recognizes the multiplicity of financial and other conflicts confronting authors, referees, and editors. Red Flower Publication adopted a policy in August 2008 that does not aim to eliminate conflict but to manage it. The most important element of our policy is that all authors, members, referees, and editors must disclose any association that poses or could be perceived as a financial or intellectual conflict of interest in connection with the manuscript.
Authors are required during submission of their manuscripts to complete the online declaration form, to disclose any conflict of interest, and to acknowledge all funding sources supporting the work. The corresponding author must ensure that all authors have been asked to disclose any conflicts of interest.
When asked to evaluate a manuscript, reviewers and editors must disclose any association that poses a conflict of interest in connection with the manuscript. Recent collaborators, defined as people who have coauthored a paper or were a principal investigator on a grant with any of the authors within the past 48 months, must be excluded as editors and reviewers. Referees and editors are asked to recues themselves from handling a paper if the conflict makes them unable to make an impartial scientific judgment or evaluation. A referee or editor who has a conflict but believes that it does not preclude his or her making a proper judgment must disclose to the journal the nature of the conflict.
Divulging a potential conflict usually does not invalidate the research or the comments of a referee or editor; it simply provides the reader information necessary to independently assess the work. A conflict of interest includes a financial association or relationship that could influence the objectivity, integrity, or interpretation of a publication. Such conflicts of interest include relationships with corporations whose products or services are related to the subject matter of the article. These relations include employment, substantive ownership of stock or mutual funds, membership on a standing advisory council or committee, service on the board of directors, or public association with the company or its products. Other areas of conflict of interest could include receiving consulting fees, patent filings, serving as a paid spokesperson, or providing services in exchange for honoraria. Other examples of possible conflicts include past or present association as thesis advisor or thesis student, or a family relationship, such as a spouse, domestic partner, or parent–child relationship.
When a conflict of interest is disclosed either by the author or editor, a footnote describing the conflict will be included with the published article.
Red Flower Publication reserves the right to publish an erratum disclosing conflict(s) of interest related to a previously published paper. Authors, referees, or editors who have deliberately or recklessly failed to disclose conflicts of interest may receive sanctions, including being banned from publishing in Red Flower Publication for a period of time.
Red Flower Publication recognizes the multiplicity of financial and other conflicts confronting authors, referees, and editors. Red Flower Publication adopted a policy in August 2008 that does not aim to eliminate conflict but to manage it. The most important element of our policy is that all authors, members, referees, and editors must disclose any association that poses or could be perceived as a financial or intellectual conflict of interest in connection with the manuscript.
Authors are required during submission of their manuscripts to complete the online declaration form, to disclose any conflict of interest, and to acknowledge all funding sources supporting the work. The corresponding author must ensure that all authors have been asked to disclose any conflicts of interest.
When asked to evaluate a manuscript, reviewers and editors must disclose any association that poses a conflict of interest in connection with the manuscript. Recent collaborators, defined as people who have coauthored a paper or were a principal investigator on a grant with any of the authors within the past 48 months, must be excluded as editors and reviewers. Referees and editors are asked to recues themselves from handling a paper if the conflict makes them unable to make an impartial scientific judgment or evaluation. A referee or editor who has a conflict but believes that it does not preclude his or her making a proper judgment must disclose to the journal the nature of the conflict.
Divulging a potential conflict usually does not invalidate the research or the comments of a referee or editor; it simply provides the reader information necessary to independently assess the work. A conflict of interest includes a financial association or relationship that could influence the objectivity, integrity, or interpretation of a publication. Such conflicts of interest include relationships with corporations whose products or services are related to the subject matter of the article. These relations include employment, substantive ownership of stock or mutual funds, membership on a standing advisory council or committee, service on the board of directors, or public association with the company or its products. Other areas of conflict of interest could include receiving consulting fees, patent filings, serving as a paid spokesperson, or providing services in exchange for honoraria. Other examples of possible conflicts include past or present association as thesis advisor or thesis student, or a family relationship, such as a spouse, domestic partner, or parent–child relationship.
When a conflict of interest is disclosed either by the author or editor, a footnote describing the conflict will be included with the published article.
Red Flower Publication reserves the right to publish an erratum disclosing conflict(s) of interest related to a previously published paper. Authors, referees, or editors who have deliberately or recklessly failed to disclose conflicts of interest may receive sanctions, including being banned from publishing in Red Flower Publication for a period of time.
Patients have a right to privacy that should not be infringed without informed consent. Identifying information, including patients' names, initials, or hospital numbers, should not be published in written descriptions, photographs, and pedigrees unless the information is essential for scientific purposes and the patient (or parent or guardian) gives written informed consent for publication. Informed consent for this purpose requires that a patient who is identifiable be shown the manuscript to be published. Authors should identify Individuals who provide writing assistance and disclose the funding source for this assistance.
Identifying details should be omitted if they are not essential. Complete anonymity is difficult to achieve, however, and informed consent should be obtained if there is any doubt. For example, masking the eye region in photographs of patients is inadequate protection of anonymity. If identifying characteristics are altered to protect anonymity, such as in genetic pedigrees, authors should provide assurance that alterations do not distort scientific meaning and editors should so note.
Online Cancellation Policies
Advertiser may cancel the entire Insertion Order, or any portion thereof, as follows: Run-Of-Site Banner Programs:
On written notice to Publisher given 21 or more days before the start date. With cancellations inside 21 days of the start date, advertiser will be responsible for 50% of the Insertion Order amount that was reserved for delivery.
Flat fee-based or fixed placement programs (including, but not limited to, Roadblocks, Specialty Packs, and other Sponsorships:
On written notice to Publisher given 30 or more days before the start date. With cancellations inside 30 days of the start date, advertiser will be responsible for 50% of the IO amount that was reserved for delivery.
Human and Animal Rights
When reporting experiments on human subjects, authors should indicate whether the procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation (institutional and national). If doubt exists whether the research was conducted in accordance with the ethical standards, the authors must explain the rationale for their approach, and demonstrate that the institutional review body explicitly approved the doubtful aspects of the study. When reporting experiments on animals, authors should be asked to indicate whether the institutional and national guide for the care and use of laboratory animals was followed.
Download Templates
These ready to use templates are made to help the contributors write as per the requirements of the Journal. Save the templates on your computer and use them with a word processor program. Click open the file and save as the manuscript file.
Download Template for Original Articles/ABSTRACT Reports. (.DOT file)
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All material published in the Journal title undergoes peer review to ensure fair balance, objectivity, independence, and relevance to educational need. Neither the editors of Journal title, nor its publishers, nor any other party involved in the preparation of material contained in Journal title represent or warrants that the information contained herein is in every respect accurate or complete, and they are not responsible for any errors or omissions or for the results obtained from the use of such material. Patients and consumers reading articles posted on the website of Journal title should review the information carefully with their professional healthcare provider. The information is not intended to replace medical advice offered by the physicians. Journal title and its publishers make no representations or warranties with respect to any treatment, action, or application of medication or preparation by any person following the information offered or provided. The Journal title and its publishers will not be liable for any direct, indirect, consequential, special, exemplary, or other damages arising there from.
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Last updated: 07 August, 2023
Article Processing Charges
Why you publish with Red Flower Publication Private Limited
We do not emphasizing on open access fee.
Our all journals are indexed or abstracted by several national and international indexing and abstracting service of international repute. The detail of these services is available on home page of our company’s website link under heading "Indexing Information".
We do not promise any author for acceptance in fewer days.
We decide suitability after completing review process properly (i.e. Double Blind Review System) and which is fully depends upon the reviewers comments.
We convince our authors about indexing information where our journal are indexed or abstracted.
Our all journals assigned for Print ISSN and Electronic ISSN.
We are the paid member of DOI (Digital Object Identifier) with DOI prefix No.: 10.21088 and this is using in most of our journal articles.
The detail of our all editor-in-chief and editorial board members are displayed on journal page.
We use a dedicated paid plagiarism checking software and all publishing articles are checked thoroughly before start process.
Article Processing Charges
Due to high publishing cost, these charges are necessary to cover offset publishing costs – from managing article submission and peer review, to typesetting, tagging and indexing of articles, color reproductions if color image present in manuscript, hosting articles on dedicated servers, supporting sales and marketing costs to ensure global dissemination.
Article Processing Charges will not be refunded when articles are retracted, withdrawn, replaced or detect plagiarism as a result of author error or misconduct.
Article Processing Charges Waiver Policy
The editor-in-chief, editorial board members and reviewers of the respective journal are exempted from this fee; if they are the main/first author of article in the submitting journal and which is valid up to 3 articles per year and 30% discount will be given, if they submitting more than 3 articles in a year. The articles recommended by our editor-in-chief, editorial board members and reviewers also entitled to get 30% discount on Article Processing charges.
Manuscripts whose authors are affiliated primarily with institutions located in Bangladesh, Nepal, Myanmar and Sri Lanka are entitled for a 50% discount on the convenient fee. The affiliated authors for secure funding by any research institution, university or any other funder; the authors entitle to receive 30% discount on this fee.
There is a special offer to the authors from Bangladesh and Nepal to pay processing charges in Indian Rates, which does not includes printed copy of the issue, however they will be eligible to free access for 3 months from the date of publication of the issue.
No refund or credit will be offered in the following circumstances
Delays resulting from editorial decisions or author changes: These are a standard part of the publishing process. Therefore no refund or credit will be offered.
Article Processing Charges will not be refunded when articles are retracted, withdrawn, replaced or detect plagiarism as a result of author error or misconduct.
In rare cases where articles are removed completely after acceptance for publication we will not refund or credit an Article Processing Charges. This is because Red Flower Publications has provided publishing services and is only able to recoup this investment through the Article Processing Charges. The later removal of the article does not detract from this investment and is typically for reasons beyond our control.
We will refund Article Processing Charges if an error on our part has resulted in a failure to publish an article under the print and online terms selected by the authors.
Term and conditions for author on Article Processing Charges
This fee should be paid immediately after submission of the article.
No article(s) will be processed until the required fee is received.
The fee is not a guarantee to publish the article(s).
This fee includes online access for 3 months and a printed copy of the issue and if author located outside India has to pay postage and handling charges for USD70.
PROCESSING CHARGES (The Processing Charges includes printed copy and FREE online access of your article for the period of three months from the date of publication. Postage & handling per copy:India ₹1000 ,Other Countries US$78
India in INR
Additional Copy Cost-India(₹)
Outside India in USD
Additional Copy Cost-Other Countries(US$)
Community and Public Health Nursing (167)
1000
250
78
20
Indian Journal of Agriculture Business (23)
2000
500
156
39
Indian Journal of Anatomy (2)
5000
1000
391
78
Indian Journal of Ancient Medicine and Yoga (1)
2000
500
156
39
Indian Journal of Anesthesia and Analgesia (24)
5000
1000
391
78
Indian Journal of Biology (38)
3000
500
234
39
Indian Journal of Cancer Education and Research (25)
2000
500
156
39
Indian Journal of Communicable Diseases (48)
3000
500
234
39
Indian Journal of Dental Education (3)
3000
500
234
39
Indian Journal of Diabetes and Endocrinology (208)
Nil
500
Nil
39
Indian Journal of Emergency Medicine (62)
5000
1000
391
78
Indian Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology (5)
10000
1000
781
78
Indian Journal of Forensic Odontology (6)
3000
500
234
39
Indian Journal of Genetics and Molecular Research (7)
2000
500
154
38
Indian Journal of Law and Human Behavior (58)
3000
500
156
39
Indian Journal of Legal Medicine (191)
NIL
500
NIL
39
Indian Journal of Library and Information Science (8)
3000
500
234
39
Indian Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine (56)
3000
500
234
39.06
Indian Journal of Medical and Health Sciences (41)
3000
1000
234
78
Indian Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (9)
5000
1000
391
78
Indian Journal of Pathology: Research and Practice (10)
5000
1000
391
78
Indian Journal of Plant and Soil (29)
2000
500
156
39
Indian Journal of Preventive Medicine (19)
3000
500
234
39
Indian Journal of Research in Anthropology (57)
2000
500
156
39
Indian Journal of Surgical Nursing (11)
1000
250
75
20
Indian Journal of Trauma and Emergency Pediatrics (4)
5000
1000
391
78
Indian Journal of Waste Management (175)
Nil
500
Nil
39
International Journal of Food, Nutrition & Dietetics (31)
2000
500
156
39
International Journal of Forensic Science (194)
Nil
1000
Nil
39
International Journal of Neurology and Neurosurgery (12)
5000
1000
391
78
International Journal of Pediatric Nursing (70)
1000
250
75
20
International Journal of Political Science (60)
2000
500
156
39
International Journal of Practical Nursing (51)
1000
250
75
20
International Physiology (44)
5000
500
391
39
Journal of Aeronautic Dentistry (13)
00
1000
00
78
Journal of Animal Feed Science and Technology (33)
2000
500
156
38
Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine and Surgery (43)
3000
500
234
39
Journal of Emergency and Trauma Nursing (196)
Nil
500
Nil
39
Journal of Food Additives and Contaminants (197)
Journal of Food Technology and Engineering (198)
Journal of Forensic Chemistry and Toxicology (84)
3000
500
234
39
Journal of Global Medical Education and Research (192)
Nil
500
Nil
39
Journal of Global Public Health (190)
NIL
500
NIL
39
Journal of Microbiology and Related Research (47)
3000
500
234
39
Journal of Nurse Midwifery and Maternal Health (75)
1000
250
79
20
Journal of Orthopedic Education (46)
3000
500
234
39
Journal of Pharmaceutical and Medicinal Chemistry (42)
2000
500
156
39
Journal of Plastic Surgery and Transplantation (76)
Nil
500
Nil
39
Journal of Psychiatric Nursing (14)
1000
250
75
20
Journal of Radiology (199)
386
500
5
39
Journal of Social Welfare and Management (15)
2000
500
156
39
Meat Science International (171)
Medicinal Drugs and Devices Index (200)
New Indian Journal of Surgery (16)
5000
1000
391
78
Ophthalmology and Allied Sciences (45)
5000
1000
391
78
Pediatrics Education and Research (22)
3000
500
234
39
Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy Journal (17)
2000
500
156
39
RFP Gastroenterology International (55)
Nil
500
Nil
39
RFP Indian Journal of Hospital Infection (177)
Nil
500
Nil
39
RFP Indian Journal of Medical Psychiatry (77)
Nil
500
Nil
39
RFP Journal of Biochemistry and Biophysics (68)
2000
500
156
39
RFP Journal of Dermatology (89)
3000
500
234
39
RFP Journal of ENT and Allied Sciences (54)
2000
500
156
39
RFP Journal of Gerontology and Geriatric Nursing (72)
Nil
500
Nil
39
RFP Journal of Hospital Administration (189)
Nil
500
Nil
39
Urology, Nephrology and Andrology International (53)
Manuscripts should always be submitted via web based manuscript submission system.
All submissions are peer reviewed by the editorial board and a select group of reviewers. Please make sure that all guidelines are followed carefully. All the accepted articles will be queued for publication and will appear in the futures issues based on the priorities set by the editorial board.
All messages and reviews sent electronically will be acknowledged electronically upon receipt. Please supply any information you think may be helpful in replying electronically. If you do not receive an acknowledgement one week after submission, assume that the message did not reach the editorial office. Please wait and do not send multiple messages, because it takes much work to eliminate double mail.
Note : e-mails with the forcibly consideration, multiple queries on status, vicious language, offensive writings to Editor/Associate Editors will lead to rejection of Manuscript.
Status of Manuscript
Editorial Team will inform the status of submitted manuscript every 15th day of month directly to the corresponding author’s inbox.
Researchers, as authors, require access to the largest possible audience to disseminate their findings; researchers, as readers, need the broadest possible access to the relevant literature
No time lag: An article can be "published" -- posted on the Web -- as soon as it is accepted and prepared for publication
Faster dissemination of scientific information by expediting peer review, editorial and production work, and distribution
Interactivity: Enabling letters to the editor and discussions concerning articles to be created and distributed online and linked to the articles in question
Reference linking: Linking to other electronic information, such as links between reference citations and article abstracts and between references to material on the Web and the remote sites themselves
No space limitations and no length limitations: Add extra on the site and save print cost
Articles available online via Open Access have higher impact rates than proprietary online and print articles
Beyond a simple website
Putting up a simple HTML or PDF-based website is not enough, a complete journal site needs more
Facility to conduct an extensive search across the full text of multiple journals.
Facility to submit comments or remarks on published article
Ability to go to other sites via reference and external linking
Linking from other sites so that visitors can reach this site including from PubMed
Good ranking with search engines enabling people to find your site
Moving with internatioal trend: Metatags (e.g. DC metadata), user statistics (e.g. similar to COUNTER code), site structure (e.g. OepnURL), multiple mirroring (e.g. archiving at OAI compliant servers), and more
Future-readiness with changing norms and technology should be able to adapt quickly
Unique features
Mobile / hand-held device optimization
Linking from PubMed, DOAJ, Cross Ref, etc.
Citation tracking and citation alerts
Linking for bacterial species names and eponyms
Revenue from AdSense, sales through secondary aggregating agencies, ALJC, etc.
Translation into multiple languages
Providing electronic data to bibliographic agencies such as PubMed, ISI, CABI, SCOPUS, DOAJ, etc.
Original Articles are scientific reports of the results of original clinical research. The text is limited to 2700 words, with an abstract, a maximum of 5 tables and figures (total), and up to 40 references.
Special Articles are scientific reports of original research in such areas as economic policy, ethics, law, and health care delivery. The text is limited to 2700 words, with an abstract, a maximum of 5 tables and figures (total), and up to 40 references.
Cases Reports
Brief Reports usually describe one to three patients or a single family. The text is limited to 2000 words, a maximum of 3 tables and figures (total), and up to 25 references. They begin with a brief summary of no more than 100 words.
Clinical Problem-Solving manuscripts consider the step-by-step process of clinical decision making. Information about a patient is presented to an expert clinician or clinicians in stages (indicated by boldface type in the manuscript) to simulate the way such information emerges in clinical practice. The clinician responds (in regular type) as new information is presented, sharing his or her reasoning with the reader. The text should not exceed 2500 words, and there should be no more than 20 references. The use of clinical illustrative materials, such as x-ray films, is encouraged.
Review Articles
Review articles are usually solicited by the editors, but we will consider unsolicited material. All review articles undergo the same peer-review and editorial process as original research reports. They should be written for the general physician, not specialists. Consequently, they may include material that might be considered too introductory for specialists in the field being covered.
Conflicts of Interest: Because the essence of review articles is selection and interpretation of the literature, the Journal expects that the authors of such articles will not have significant financial associations with a company (or its competitor) that makes a product discussed in the article.
Clinical Practice articles are evidence-based reviews of topics relevant to practicing physicians, both primary care providers and specialists. Articles in this series should include the following sections: the clinical problem, strategies and evidence, areas of uncertainty, guidelines from professional societies, and the authors' conclusions and recommendations. The text is limited to 2500 words and a small number of figures and tables. These articles do not include an abstract.
Clinical Therapeutics articles are evidence-based reviews of topics relevant to practicing physicians. The series focuses on clinically oriented information about specific forms of therapy,including drugs, devices, and procedures. Each article in the series begins with a clinical vignette describing a patient with a specified condition for whom the treatment under discussion has been recommended. This vignette is followed by a definition of the clinical problem, a description of the pathphysiology and how the therapy works, clinical evidence, clinical use (including costs), adverse effects, areas of uncertainty, guidelines, and recommendations. The text is limited to 2500 words. These articles do not include an abstract.
Current Concepts articles focus on clinical topics, including those in specialty areas but of wide interest. The text is limited to 2400 words, with a maximum of 4 figures and tables (total), and up to 50 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Drug Therapy articles detail the pharmacology and use of specific drugs or classes of drugs, or the various drugs used to treat particular diseases. The text is limited to 3300 words, with a maximum of 5 figures and tables (total), and up to 100 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Mechanisms of Disease articles discuss the cellular and molecular mechanisms of diseases or categories of diseases. The text is limited to 3000 words, with a maximum of 5 figures and tables (total), and up to 100 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Medical Progress articles provide comprehensive, scholarly overviews of important clinical subjects, with the principal (but not exclusive) focus on developments during the past five years. Each article details how the perception of a disease, disease category, diagnostic approach, or therapeutic intervention has evolved in recent years. The text is limited to 3300 words, with a maximum of 5 tables and figures (total), and up to 100 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Letter to the Editor
Letters to the Editor provide a forum for readers to comment about articles recently published in the Journal, and they are a place to publish concise articles, such as reports of novel cases. Letters to the Editor are considered for publication (subject to editing and abridgment) provided they do not contain material that has been submitted or published elsewhere.
Letters in reference to a Journal article must not exceed 175 words (excluding references), and must be received within three weeks after publication of the article. Letters not related to a Journal article must not exceed 400 words (excluding references).
A letter can have no more than five references and one figure or table.
A letter can be signed by no more than three authors.
You will be asked to include your full address, telephone number, fax number, and e-mail address. Financial associations or other possible conflicts of interest must be disclosed. You will receive an e-mailed acknowledgment of your submission. Additional information may also be found in our Frequently Asked Questions.
Other Submissions
Editorials usually provide commentary and analysis concerning an article in the issue of the Journal in which they appear. They may include 1 figure or table. They are nearly always solicited, although unsolicited editorials may occasionally be considered. Editorials are limited to 750 words, with up to 10 references.
Perspective articles cover a wide variety of topics of current interest in health care, medicine, and the intersection between medicine and society. We welcome submissions and proposals. Perspective articles are limited to 1000 to 1200 words and usually include one figure. There is a maximum of 5 references.
Sounding Board articles are opinion essays. They are similar to editorials but are not tied to a particular article. They often present opinions on health policy issues and are normally unsolicited. The text is limited to 2000 words.
Clinical Implications of Basic Research articles discuss single papers from preclinical journals. The purpose is to explain the findings and comment on their possible clinical applications in fewer than 750 words. There may be 1 figure and up to 5 references. We do not consider unsolicited manuscripts in this category.
Special Reports are miscellaneous articles of special interest to the medical community. They are limited to 2700 words.
Health Law, Ethics,and Human Rights are nearly always solicited, but we are willing to consider unsolicited manuscripts or proposals for manuscripts.
Health Policy Reports are nearly always solicited, but we are willing to consider unsolicited manuscripts or proposals for manuscripts.
Occasional Notes are accounts of personal experiences or descriptions of material from outside the usual areas of medical research and analysis.
Images in Clinical Medicineare classic images of common medical conditions. Images are an important part of much of what we do and learn in medicine. This feature is intended to capture the sense of visual discovery and variety that physicians experience. Images in Clinical Medicine are not intended as a vehicle for case reports.
Filler Photographs are unsolicited photographs, unrelated to the content of the Journal, that are published as space allows. There are no restrictions on subject matter, however photographs of recognizable people are not generally published.
Requirements:
Photo files must be submitted in JPEG format and have a file extension of .jpg or .jpeg.
Photos must be 1000 x 1000 pixels minimum to be considered for publication. To be eligible to be printed at the largest size, images should be 1730 pixels wide by 2000 pixels high or larger.
Photo files may be up to 10 MB in size.
Provide laser printed hard copies of all figures and graphics in black and white or colour (If any)
A maximum of five photos may be uploaded per session.
After submitting a photo you will be notified by email once it has been reviewed by our editors. You will also receive email notification if your photo is selected for publication.
Covering Letter
Disclose all possible conflicts of interest (e.g., funding sources for consultancies or studies of products). A brief indication of the importance of the paper to the concerned field of research is helpful in gaining appropriate peer review.
Copyright Form
All manuscripts are considered to be the property of from the time of submission. If is not publishing the paper, releases its rights therein at the time the manuscript is rejected following editorial/peer review or retracted by the authors. Manuscripts published in become the sole property of, with all rights in copyright reserved to.
The corresponding author, on behalf of all authors, signs a copyright transfer form.
The entire contents are protected under international copyrights. The Journal, however, grants to all users a free right of access to and permission to copy, the published articles. Important notice on reuse, reproduction or commercial use:
Contents of this site, partial or as a whole, should not be included in a framed web page.
Contents of this site, partial or as a whole, should not be included in a password protected site or a site which requires registration, even if free.
Contents of this site, partial or as a whole, should not be included in a site which charges for other contents but provides the content from this site for free.
For purchase of reprints, printable PDF or commercial reuse please contact Red Flower Publications or the executive editor of the .
All material published in the journal undergoes peer review to ensure fair balance, objectivity, independence, and relevance to educational need. Neither the editors of Journal title, nor its publishers, nor any other party involved in the preparation of material contained in represent or warrants that the information contained herein is in every respect accurate or complete, and they are not responsible for any errors or omissions or for the results obtained from the use of such material. Patients and consumers reading articles posted on the website of Journal title should review the information carefully with their professional healthcare provider. The information is not intended to replace medical advice offered by the physicians. Journal title and its publishers make no representations or warranties with respect to any treatment, action, or application of medication or preparation by any person following the information offered or provided. The Journal title and its publishers will not be liable for any direct, indirect, consequential, special, exemplary, or other damages arising there from.
The advertisers who purchase Banners on the have no influence on editorial content or presentation. The posting of particular Banners does not imply endorsement of the product (so) or the company selling them by the Journal title or its Editors.
This may contain links to web sites operated by other parties. These links are provided purely for educational purpose. Such links do not imply Journal title's endorsement of material on any other site and disclaims all liability with regard to your access of such linked web sites.
Contributors' form
The form below is for contributors to the journal to complete and submit once it is confirmed that their submission will be published in a forthcoming issue. It is also intended for contributors to prior issues who have not yet filled out an author agreement form.Please take care to fill out this form correctly, as there are no warnings on incomplete fields; and if done incorrectly it will need to be recompleted.
When you press 'Submit' this should open your email software, with an email you have to send. If possible please send the email using your institutional email account (e.g. @bpkihs.edu).
NOTE: This is an email based form, and requires that you use software such as Outlook Express or Apple Mail. If you do not use email software, please download and complete this Word document and then email it to redflowerppl@vsnl.net with 'Author Agreement Form' in the title.
Author-Suggested Reviewers
The authors are encouraged to suggest individuals who specialize in the topic(s) your manuscript to be considered to review. You may suggest maximum of 5 reviewers, with full contact details including phone numbers, mobile number and email address.
Author Checklist
In order to maintain quality and consistency in publications, we ask you to perform the following checklist prior to submitting your final proof for publication:
Include the original, hard copy of Author’s Transfer of Copyright signed by each author
Thoroughly check the reference style as mentioned above.
Thoroughly check the article for correct grammar, in particular: spelling of names, affiliations, any symbols, equations, etc.
Provide laser printed hard copies of all figures and graphics in black and white or colour (If any)
Submit a proof corrected with RED INK ONLY/track changes or as directed by the editor handling your manuscript.
Send the Corrected Proof, Copyright Transfer Form, Subscriptions (If any) with covering letter in a single envelope to the following address
Important Contact Details
By Surface mail :
Editorial Office
Red Flower Publication Pvt. Ltd.
48/41-42, DSIDC, Pocket-II
Mayur Vihar Phase-I
Delhi - 110 091 India
Tel : 91-11-22754205 , 45796900
Fax : 91-11-22754205
Red Flower Publication recognizes the importance of the integrity and completeness of the scholarly record to researchers and librarians and attaches the highest importance to maintaining trust in the authority of its electronic archive.
Red Flower Publication's policy
It is a general principle of scholarly communication that the editor of a learned journal is solely and independently responsible for deciding which articles submitted to the journal shall be published. In making this decision the editor is guided by policies of the journal's editorial board and constrained by such legal requirements in force regarding libel, copyright infringement and plagiarism. An outcome of this principle is the importance of the scholarly archive as a permanent, historic record of the transactions of scholarship. Articles that have been published shall remain extant, exact and unaltered as far as is possible. However, very occasionally circumstances may arise where an article is published that must later be retracted or even removed. Such actions must not be undertaken lightly and can only occur under exceptional circumstances.
This policy has been designed to address these concerns and to take into account current best practice in the scholarly and library communities. As standards evolve and change, we will revisit this issue and welcome the input of scholarly and library communities. We believe these issues require international standards and we will be active in lobbying various information bodies to establish international standards and best practices that the publishing and information industries can adopt.
Article Withdrawal
Only used for Articles in Press which represent early versions of articles and sometimes contain errors, or may have been accidentally submitted twice. Occasionally, but less frequently, the articles may represent infringements of professional ethical codes, such as multiple submission, bogus claims of authorship, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data or the like. Articles in Press (articles that have been accepted for publication but which have not been formally published and will not yet have the complete volume/issue/page information) that include errors, or are discovered to be accidental duplicates of other published article(s), or are determined to violate our journal publishing ethics guidelines in the view of the editors (such as multiple submission, bogus claims of authorship, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data or the like), may be "Withdrawn" from us. Withdrawn means that the article content (HTML and PDF) is removed and replaced with a HTML page and PDF simply stating that the article has been withdrawn according to the Red Flower Publication Policy on Article in Press Withdrawal with a link to the current policy document.
Article Retraction
Infringements of professional ethical codes, such as multiple submission, bogus claims of authorship, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data or the like. Occasionally a retraction will be used to correct errors in submission or publication. The retraction of an article by its authors or the editor under the advice of members of the scholarly community has long been an occasional feature of the learned world. Standards for dealing with retractions have been developed by a number of library and scholarly bodies, and this best practice is adopted for article retraction by Red Flower Publications:
A retraction note titled "Retraction: [article title]" signed by the authors and/or the editor is published in the paginated part of a subsequent issue of the journal and listed in the contents list.
In the electronic version, a link is made to the original article.
The online article is preceded by a screen containing the retraction note. It is to this screen that the link resolves; the reader can then proceed to the article itself.
The original article is retained unchanged save for a watermark on the .pdf indicating on each page that it is "retracted."
The HTML version of the document is removed.
Article Removal: Legal limitations
In an extremely limited number of cases, it may be necessary to remove an article from the online database. This will only occur where the article is clearly defamatory, or infringes others legal rights, or where the article is, or we have good reason to expect it will be, the subject of a court order, or where the article, if acted upon, might pose a serious health risk. In these circumstances, while the metadata (Title and Authors) will be retained, the text will be replaced with a screen indicating the article has been removed for legal reasons.
Article Replacement
In cases where the article, if acted upon, might pose a serious health risk, the authors of the original article may wish to retract the flawed original and replace it with a corrected version. In these circumstances the procedures for retraction will be followed with the difference that the database retraction notice will publish a link to the corrected re-published article and a history of the document.
Last Updated on 04 October, 2023
Sending a Revised Manuscript
The authors revise the manuscript as advised by reviewers and submit the revised version. Typically, at this stage, authors are advised to prepare the manuscript by closely following the journal�s instructions about style and format and to submit the manuscript in electronic form.
Reprints and Proofs
Usual practice will involve corresponding authors receiving email notification with a password and web address from which to download a PDF. Hard copies of proofs will not be mailed. To avoid delays in publication, corrections to proofs must be returned within 48 hours, by electronic transmittal, fax or mail. Authors will be charged for excessive correction at this stage of production. If authors do not return page proofs promptly, the Publisher reserves the choice to either delay publication to a subsequent issue or to proceed to press without author corrections. The Publisher reserves the right to proceed to press without submitting page proofs to the author.
Reprints
Reprints can be ordered shortly after a paper is accepted for publication and can be customized to include color covers, disclaimers, product insertions and more.If you wish to pay online please click here
Author Services
Coming soon
Pre-press-services
Coming soon
Post Publication Services
Indexing with bibliographic databases
Providing bibliographic records in electronic format to indexing agencies and secondary aggregating agencies, thus making the issues available instantly with these agencies
Data to all indexing agencies are provided ahead of print and electronically → better visibility → higher citations
Better marketing: Increasing subscription and advertisement revenue
Subscriptions of all journals increases as most libraries subscribe to all our journals
Established contacts with subscription agents and document delivery services across the globe
Librarians and agents need to send a single 'cheque' for most of their requirements
Authors should prepare their manuscripts submitted to the journal exactly according to the instructions given here. Manuscripts which do not follow the format and style of the journal may be returned to the authors for revision or rejected. The journal reserves the right to make any further formatting changes and language corrections necessary in a manuscript accepted for publication so that it conforms to the formatting requirements of the journal. Manuscripts and figures are not returned to the authors, not even upon rejection of the paper
Pre-Press Charges
Due to high publishing cost, Articles clearing in peer review process or upon acceptance, Authors are required to pay a minimum amount towards pre-press charges to Red Flower Publication Pvt. Ltd., Delhi (this cost is for a standard length research article of 12 pages in a word document including 5 figures or tables, articles over this limit will incur higher charges). The pre-press charges should reach within 15 days of the acceptance mail notification. Failure to pay pre-press charges article will not be considered for pagination. Upon acceptance, payments can be made by sending DD/Cheque should be in favour of "Red Flower Publication Pvt. Ltd." payable at Delhi, INDIA. For payment methods, please visit this page.
The processing charges are mandatory to pay by main author except editor-in-chief, editorial board member and reviewer of above journal; if they are the main author of the article and submitted in respective journal. The processing charges are not refundable in any case, if said article does not found suitable for publication.
Covering Letter
Disclose all possible conflicts of interest (e.g., funding sources for consultancies or studies of products). A brief indication of the importance of the paper to the concerned field of research is helpful in gaining appropriate peer review.
The authors are encouraged to suggest individuals who specialize in the topic(s) your manuscript to be considered to review your manuscript. You may suggest maximum of 5 reviewers, with full contact details including phone numbers, fax number and email address.
Copyright Form
All manuscripts are considered to be the property of from the time of submission. If is not publishing the paper, releases its rights therein at the time the manuscript is rejected following editorial/peer review or retracted by the authors. Manuscripts published in become the sole property of, with all rights in copyright reserved to.
The corresponding author, on behalf of all authors, signs a copyright transfer form.
Your Manuscript should be typed, double-spaced on standard-sized – paper (8.5" x 11") with 1" margins on all sides. You should use 12 pt Times New Roman font. Authors should take care over the fonts which are used in the document, including fonts within graphics. Fonts should be restricted to Times New Roman, Symbol and Zapf Dingbats.
Title : Should be in Title Case ; The first character in each word in the title have to be capitalized.
A research paper typically should include in the following order
Abstract
Keywords
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Acknowledgements (If any)
References
Figure legends
Tables
Appendixes (if necessary)
Abbreviations (if necessary)
Abstract – Limit of 250 Words
A brief summary of the research. The abstract should include a brief introduction, a description of the hypothesis tested, the approach used to test the hypothesis, the results seen and the conclusions of the work.
Key words
Please, write no more than six keywords. Write specific keywords. They should be written left aligned, arranged alphabetically in 12pt Times Roman, and the line must begin with the words Keywords boldfaced.
Introduction
Description of the research area, pertinent background information, and the hypotheses tested in the study should be included under this section. The introduction should provide sufficient background information such that a scientifically literate reader can understand and appreciate the experiments to be described. The introduction MUST include in-text citations including references to pertinent reviews and primary scientific literature. The specific aims of the project should be identified along with a rationale for the specific experiments and other work performed.
Materials and Methods
Materials and/or subjects utilized in the study as well as the procedures undertaken to complete the work. The methods should be described in sufficient detail such that they could be repeated by a competent researcher. Please include the company sources for all uncommon reagents (kits, drugs, etc). Illustrations and/or tables may be helpful in describing complex equipment or elaborate procedures. The statistical tool used to analyze the data should be mentioned. All procedures involving experimental animals or human subjects must accompany with statement on necessary ethical approval from appropriate ethics committee.
Results
Data acquired from the research with appropriate statistical analysis described in the methods section should be included in this section. The results section should describe the rational for each experiment, the results obtained and its significance. Results should be organized into figures and tables with descriptive captions. The captions, although brief, should tell the reader the method used, explain any abbreviations included in the figure, and should end with a statement as to the conclusion of the figure. Qualitative as well as quantitative results should be included if applicable.
Discussion/Conclusion
This section should relate the results section to current understanding of the scientific problems being investigated in the field. Description of relevant references to other work/s in the field should be included here. This section also allows you to discuss the significance of your results - i.e. does the data support the hypotheses you set out to test? This section should end with new answers/questions that arise as a result of your work.
Tables and Figures
Tables
Each table must start on a separate sheet. They should be numbered with Roman numerals according to their sequence in the text, and have a short self-explanatory heading. Use SI units. Tables should include vertical rules, but horizontal rules should separate column headings from the content. Authors should keep in mind the page layout of the journal when designing tables. Tables that fit onto one printed page are preferred. Detailed explanations of symbols, units, statistics and abbreviations should follow below the table.
Illustrations
Figures for final production should be submitted as electronic files and hard copy so that the editorial office can ensure that the output of electronic files matches the hardcopy. Please pay particular attention to the guidelines below. The editorial office cannot undertake preparation of manuscripts and illustrations not conforming to journal style. Manuscripts of insufficient quality will be returned immediately without refereeing. A high standard of illustration (both line and photo) is an editorial priority. All illustrations should be prepared for printing to fit 80 x 240 mm (column width) or 169 mm by up to 240 mm (full page) size. It is preferred that the full-page length is not used and that authors keep in mind that the caption will be placed underneath the figure. In the event that full-page length is necessary for plates, captions will have to appear on adjacent pages. Figure(s) must be numbered consecutively in the text. Compound figures with more than one micrograph or photo should be referred by a single figure reference (e.g. Figure 1), and individual parts should be labeled with capitalized letters in the lower left-hand corner. Lettering should be of a sans-serif type (i.e. fonts without serifs such as Arial) with a minimum published size of 4.2 mm (12 pt). Descriptive labeling in the figures should be clearly readable, and all lettering should have a minimum published size of 6 pt (2.1 mm) for labeling items on photographs or in line art is recommended and a maximum size of 10 pt is suggested. Use a scale bar to indicate magnifications and place in the lower right corner if possible. Computer prepared photographic images must be at a minimum of 350 dpi at the final publication size. Lower resolution will result in pixilation and poor quality images. These should be submitted as JPEG, TIFF or PPT files, but encapsulated postscript (EPS) format is also acceptable.
Computer drawn figures are accepted provided they are of high quality. Please note that graphs produced by many statistic packages are rarely adequate. In particular, letter quality on axes and captions are often poor. Such figures should be exported into an accepted graphics package and lettering rendered using a text function. Authors should note that .dot, .bmp, and .pat fills should be avoided. Do not use postscripts fill patterns as these are often based on bit map patterns that result in screening patterns during final reproduction? When filling illustrations, use fills such as lines, tints or solids. Line width minimum is 0.25 pt (0.09 mm). Also avoid the use of bitmap scans to render text and detail. Text should be saved as text at a minimum text size of 6 pt (2.1 mm). Please submit line art as Corel Draw, Adobe Illustrator, or EPS files. These must be at a minimum resolution of 800 DPI at publication size. High resolution may be necessary where fine line detail is present.
For graphs Excel graphs are also acceptable. Note that vertical axes must all be at the same scale especially where the paper compares between them. Otherwise they should be produced as separate figures. Avoid 3D plots when presenting 2D data. Where electronic figures are submitted, please submit a hard copy also at final acceptance stage so that it can be checked against the electronic files during proof preparation.
Table and Figure legends
Figure and table legends should be included at the end of the manuscript. Figure legends should include a statement at the end of each legend about reproduction size (e.g. at full page width, at column width). They should be double spaced and typed in the journal format. Explanations should be brief and authors should keep in mind that legends will be placed below figures.
Acknowledgements – Limit of 100 Words
This is a brief section crediting the people who have helped make your manuscript possible and who aided you in your work but are not part of the authorship. Please mention all applicable grants and other funding that supported your work.
Page layout & styles
Page size
Letter Portrait 8 ½ X 11
Margins
All Margins, 1 inch
Page numbers
Numbered at bottom right
Footer / Headers
None
Title
14 pt Times New Roman, bold, centered.
Author and co-authors
12 pt Times New Roman centered, bold - author and all co-authors names in one line. The corresponding author should include an asterisk*.
Authors affiliation
12 pt Times New roman centered - giving each authors' affiliation (i.e. Department/Organization/Address/Place/Country/email). Followed by single line spacing.
Author for Correspondence: 10pt Times New roman centered - giving a valid e-mail of the corresponding (main) author is a must. It should be indicated as* followed by two line spacing.
Abstract
12 pt Times New roman, full justification Normal - maximum 250 words
Text
12 pt Times New roman, full justification – 1.5 line spacing between paragraphs. No indentation
Headings and numbering
Major headings (ABSTRACT, KEYWORDS, INTRODUCTION, MATERIALS AND METHODS, RESULTS, DISCUSSION, ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS, REFERENCES, FIGURE LEGENDS, TABLE/S) in upper case left-justified, 12 pt bold, Intermediate headings should be in italics, sentence case, left justified, 12 pt
Tables
To be incorporated at the end of Manuscript
Correct
Table 1 : Radiograph showing defects
Incorrect
Table No. 1 : Radiograph showing defects
Figures /Graphs
Figures may be embedded in your word document but they should be created with a program that allows you to save them as gif, jpg or tiff format.
For any figures or other materials directly extracted from previously published materials, you must have written permission from the publisher of that material for reprint use. A copy of that permission release must be submitted with your article.
It is the individual author's responsibility to attain this permission.
To be incorporated at the end of the manuscript with proper labeling
Correct
Figure 1 : Radiograph showing defects in distal region.
Incorrect
Figure No. 1 : Radiograph showing defects in distal region.
Graphs
To be included from excel, it should be editable.
Non – editable graphs will not be accepted.
All text should be fully justified. Please put all primary section titles in UPPER CASE letters and subheading in both Upper and Lower Case letters. Do not number your titles (for example, 1.0 Introduction; 2.0 Background). Do not use the tab key to indent blocks of text such as paragraphs of quotes or lists because the page layout program overrides your left margin with its own, and the tabs end up in mid-sentence.
References
In-text citation
Correct / Acceptable Format
Natural products have proven to be a great source of new biologically active compounds. Thus, in an effort to discover new lead anti-malarial compounds, several research group screen plant extracts to detect secondary metabolites with relevant biological activities that could served as templates for the development of new drugs. Flavonoids have been isolated and characterized from many medicinal plants used in malaria endemic areas.[10] However, controversial data have been obtained regarding their antiplasmodial activity, probably because of their structural diversity.[11-13]. More recently, several flavonoids have been isolated from Artemisia afra[14] and Artemisia indica[15], two plants related to Artemisia annua, the famous traditional Chinese medicinal plant from which artemisinin is isolated.
Incorrect / Not accepted
Natural products have proven to be a great source of new biologically active compounds. Thus, in an effort to discover new lead anti-malarial compounds, several research group screen plant extracts to detect secondary metabolites with relevant biological activities that could served as templates for the development of new drugs. Flavonoids have been isolated and characterized from many medicinal plants used in malaria endemic areas. (10). However, controversial data have been obtained regarding their antiplasmodial activity, probably because of their structural diversity (11, 12, 13). More recently, several flavonoids have been isolated from Artemisia afra14 and Artemisia indica(15), two plants related to Artemisia annua, the famous traditional Chinese medicinal plant from which artemisinin is isolated.
Halpern SD, Ubel PA, Caplan AL. Solid-organ transplantation in HIV-infected patients. N Engl J Med. 2002 Jul 25;347(4): 284-7.
2.More than six authors
Rose ME, Huerbin MB, Melick J, Marion DW, Palmer AM, Schiding JK, et al. Regulation of interstitial excitatory amino acid concentrations after cortical contusion injury. Brain Res. 2002; 935(1-2): 40-6.
3. Organization as Author
Diabetes Prevention Program Research Group. Hypertension, insulin, and proinsulin in participants with impaired glucose tolerance. Hypertension. 2002; 40(5): 679-86.
4. Unknown Author
21st century heart solution may have a sting in the tail. BMJ. 2002; 325(7357): 184-5.
5. Journal article on the Internet
Abood S. Quality improvement initiative in nursing homes: the ANA acts in an advisory role. Am J Nurs [serial on the Internet]. 2002 Jun [cited 2002 Aug 12]; 102(6): [about 3 p.]. Available from:
Breedlove GK, Schorfheide AM. Adolescent pregnancy. 2nd ed. Wieczorek RR, editor. White Plains (NY): March of Dimes Education Services; 2001.
9. Organization(s) as author
Royal Adelaide Hospital; University of Adelaide, Department of Clinical Nursing. Compendium of nursing research and practice development, 1999-2000. Adelaide (Australia): Adelaide University; 2001.
10. Chapter in a book
Meltzer PS, Kallioniemi A, Trent JM. Chromosome alterations in human solid tumors. In: Vogelstein B, Kinzler KW, editors. The genetic basis of human cancer. New York: McGraw-Hill; 2002. p. 93-113.
11. Conference proceedings
Harnden P, Joffe JK, Jones WG, editors. Germ cell tumours V. Proceedings of the 5th Germ Cell Tumour Conference; 2001 Sep 13-15; Leeds, UK. New York: Springer; 2002.
12. Thesis
N. Khoshakhlagh. The compositions of volatile fractions of Peganum harmala seeds and its smoke. Pharm. D. Thesis, Faculty of Pharmacy, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. (2002).
13. WEBSITES
Website information
Cancer-Pain.org [homepage on the Internet]. New York: Association of Cancer Online Resources, Inc.; c2000-01 [updated 2002 May 16; cited 2002 Jul 9]. Available from: http://www.cancer-pain.org/.
Submission of Manuscript
Manuscripts should always be submitted via web based manuscript submission system [www.rfppl.co.in] .
Hard copies along with CD having manuscripts may also be submitted if requested by the Editor. All submissions are peer reviewed by the editorial board and a select group of reviewers. Please make sure that all guidelines are followed carefully. All the accepted articles will be queued for publication and will appear in the futures issues based on the priorities set by the editorial board.
Correspondence :redflowerppl@vsnl.net
Acknowledgements
All messages and reviews sent electronically will be acknowledged electronically upon receipt. Please supply any information you think may be helpful in replying electronically. If you do not receive an acknowledgement one week after submission, assume that the message did not reach the editorial office of . Please wait and do not send multiple messages, because it takes much work to eliminate double mail.
Note : e-mails with the forcibly consideration, multiple queries on status, vicious language, offensive writings to Editor/Associate Editors will lead to rejection of Manuscript.
Status of Manuscript
team will inform the status of submitted manuscript every 15th day of month directly to the corresponding author’s inbox.
Author Checklist
In order to maintain quality and consistency in publications, we ask you to perform the following checklist prior to submitting your final proof for publication:
Include the original, hard copy of Author’s Transfer of Copyright signed by each author
Thoroughly check the reference style as mentioned above.
Thoroughly check the article for correct grammar, in particular: spelling of names, affiliations, any symbols, equations, etc.
Provide laser printed hard copies of all figures and graphics in black and white or colour (If any)
Submit a proof corrected with RED INK ONLY/track changes or as directed by the editor handling your manuscript.
Send the Corrected Proof, Copyright Transfer Form, Subscriptions (If any) with covering letter in a single envelope to the following address
Important Contact Details
By Surface mail :
Editorial Office
Red Flower Publication Pvt. Ltd.
48/41-42, DSIDC, Pocket-II
Mayur Vihar Phase-I
Delhi - 110 091 India
Tel : 91-11-22754205 , 45796900
Fax : 91-11-22754205
Original Articles are scientific reports of the results of original clinical research. The text is limited to 2700 words, with an abstract, a maximum of 5 tables and figures (total), and up to 40 references.
Special Articles are scientific reports of original research in such areas as economic policy, ethics, law, and health care delivery. The text is limited to 2700 words, with an abstract, a maximum of 5 tables and figures (total), and up to 40 references.
Cases Reports
Brief Reports usually describe one to three patients or a single family. The text is limited to 2000 words, a maximum of 3 tables and figures (total), and up to 25 references. They begin with a brief summary of no more than 100 words.
Clinical Problem-Solving manuscripts consider the step-by-step process of clinical decision making. Information about a patient is presented to an expert clinician or clinicians in stages (indicated by boldface type in the manuscript) to simulate the way such information emerges in clinical practice. The clinician responds (in regular type) as new information is presented, sharing his or her reasoning with the reader. The text should not exceed 2500 words, and there should be no more than 20 references. The use of clinical illustrative materials, such as x-ray films, is encouraged.
Review Articles
Review articles are usually solicited by the editors, but we will consider unsolicited material. All review articles undergo the same peer-review and editorial process as original research reports. They should be written for the general physician, not specialists. Consequently, they may include material that might be considered too introductory for specialists in the field being covered.
Conflicts of Interest: Because the essence of review articles is selection and interpretation of the literature, the Journal expects that the authors of such articles will not have significant financial associations with a company (or its competitor) that makes a product discussed in the article.
Clinical Practice articles are evidence-based reviews of topics relevant to practicing physicians, both primary care providers and specialists. Articles in this series should include the following sections: the clinical problem, strategies and evidence, areas of uncertainty, guidelines from professional societies, and the authors' conclusions and recommendations. The text is limited to 2500 words and a small number of figures and tables. These articles do not include an abstract.
Clinical Therapeutics articles are evidence-based reviews of topics relevant to practicing physicians. The series focuses on clinically oriented information about specific forms of therapy,including drugs, devices, and procedures. Each article in the series begins with a clinical vignette describing a patient with a specified condition for whom the treatment under discussion has been recommended. This vignette is followed by a definition of the clinical problem, a description of the pathphysiology and how the therapy works, clinical evidence, clinical use (including costs), adverse effects, areas of uncertainty, guidelines, and recommendations. The text is limited to 2500 words. These articles do not include an abstract.
Current Concepts articles focus on clinical topics, including those in specialty areas but of wide interest. The text is limited to 2400 words, with a maximum of 4 figures and tables (total), and up to 50 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Drug Therapy articles detail the pharmacology and use of specific drugs or classes of drugs, or the various drugs used to treat particular diseases. The text is limited to 3300 words, with a maximum of 5 figures and tables (total), and up to 100 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Mechanisms of Disease articles discuss the cellular and molecular mechanisms of diseases or categories of diseases. The text is limited to 3000 words, with a maximum of 5 figures and tables (total), and up to 100 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Medical Progress articles provide comprehensive, scholarly overviews of important clinical subjects, with the principal (but not exclusive) focus on developments during the past five years. Each article details how the perception of a disease, disease category, diagnostic approach, or therapeutic intervention has evolved in recent years. The text is limited to 3300 words, with a maximum of 5 tables and figures (total), and up to 100 references. These articles do not include an abstract.
Letter to the Editor
Letters to the Editor provide a forum for readers to comment about articles recently published in the Journal, and they are a place to publish concise articles, such as reports of novel cases. Letters to the Editor are considered for publication (subject to editing and abridgment) provided they do not contain material that has been submitted or published elsewhere.
Letters in reference to a Journal article must not exceed 175 words (excluding references), and must be received within three weeks after publication of the article. Letters not related to a Journal article must not exceed 400 words (excluding references).
A letter can have no more than five references and one figure or table.
A letter can be signed by no more than three authors.
You will be asked to include your full address, telephone number, fax number, and e-mail address. Financial associations or other possible conflicts of interest must be disclosed. You will receive an e-mailed acknowledgment of your submission. Additional information may also be found in our Frequently Asked Questions.
Other Submissions
Editorials usually provide commentary and analysis concerning an article in the issue of the Journal in which they appear. They may include 1 figure or table. They are nearly always solicited, although unsolicited editorials may occasionally be considered. Editorials are limited to 750 words, with up to 10 references.
Perspective articles cover a wide variety of topics of current interest in health care, medicine, and the intersection between medicine and society. We welcome submissions and proposals. Perspective articles are limited to 1000 to 1200 words and usually include one figure. There is a maximum of 5 references.
Sounding Board articles are opinion essays. They are similar to editorials but are not tied to a particular article. They often present opinions on health policy issues and are normally unsolicited. The text is limited to 2000 words.
Clinical Implications of Basic Research articles discuss single papers from preclinical journals. The purpose is to explain the findings and comment on their possible clinical applications in fewer than 750 words. There may be 1 figure and up to 5 references. We do not consider unsolicited manuscripts in this category.
Special Reports are miscellaneous articles of special interest to the medical community. They are limited to 2700 words.
Health Law, Ethics,and Human Rights are nearly always solicited, but we are willing to consider unsolicited manuscripts or proposals for manuscripts.
Health Policy Reports are nearly always solicited, but we are willing to consider unsolicited manuscripts or proposals for manuscripts.
Occasional Notes are accounts of personal experiences or descriptions of material from outside the usual areas of medical research and analysis.
Images in Clinical Medicineare classic images of common medical conditions. Images are an important part of much of what we do and learn in medicine. This feature is intended to capture the sense of visual discovery and variety that physicians experience. Images in Clinical Medicine are not intended as a vehicle for case reports.
Filler Photographs are unsolicited photographs, unrelated to the content of the Journal, that are published as space allows. There are no restrictions on subject matter, however photographs of recognizable people are not generally published.
Requirements:
Photo files must be submitted in JPEG format and have a file extension of .jpg or .jpeg.
Photos must be 1000 x 1000 pixels minimum to be considered for publication. To be eligible to be printed at the largest size, images should be 1730 pixels wide by 2000 pixels high or larger.
Photo files may be up to 10 MB in size.
Provide laser printed hard copies of all figures and graphics in black and white or colour (If any)
A maximum of five photos may be uploaded per session.
After submitting a photo you will be notified by email once it has been reviewed by our editors. You will also receive email notification if your photo is selected for publication.
Protection of Patients' Rights
The right to give or withhold authorization of disclosures: The patient generally has the right to control who has access to confidential information except as otherwise provided by law. The patient needs to give specific authorization or permission to allow a third party to have access to confidential information.
The right to maintain privacy: Only those persons directly involved in the care of the patient's health problem should have access to private information. Health care workers should protect information revealed during provider-health care worker encounters, including all written or electronic records of these encounters.
The right to have autonomy: Autonomy is the right of a patient to determine what will be done with his or her body, personal belongings, and personal information; this concept applies to any adult person who is mentally competent. Sometimes the right to autonomy can be overridden in the interest of protecting others who may be harmed by the patient's decisions.
The right to be given information: The patient has a right to information about his or her medical diagnosis, treatment regimen, and progress. This allows the patient to make appropriate, informed decisions about his or her health care.
Sending a revised manuscript
The authors revise the manuscript as advised by reviewers and submit the revised version. Typically, at this stage, authors are advised to prepare the manuscript by closely following the journal's instructions about style and format and to submit the manuscript in electronic form.
Reprints and proofs
Usual practice will involve corresponding authors receiving email notification with a password and web address from which to download a PDF. Hard copies of proofs will not be mailed. To avoid delays in publication, corrections to proofs must be returned within 48 hours, by electronic transmittal, fax or mail. Authors will be charged for excessive correction at this stage of production. If authors do not return page proofs promptly, the Publisher reserves the choice to either delay publication to a subsequent issue or to proceed to press without author corrections. The Publisher reserves the right to proceed to press without submitting page proofs to the author.
Reprints
Reprints can be ordered shortly after a paper is accepted for publication and can be customized to include color covers, disclaimers, product insertions and more.If you wish to pay online please click here
Disclaimer and Copyrights
The entire contents are protected under international copyrights. The Journal, however, grants to all users a free right of access to and permission to copy, the published articles. Important notice on reuse, reproduction or commercial use:
Contents of this site, partial or as a whole, should not be included in a framed web page.
Contents of this site, partial or as a whole, should not be included in a password protected site or a site which requires registration, even if free.
Contents of this site, partial or as a whole, should not be included in a site which charges for other contents but provides the content from this site for free.
For purchase of reprints, printable PDF or commercial reuse please contact Red Flower Publications or the executive editor of the .
All material published in the journal undergoes peer review to ensure fair balance, objectivity, independence, and relevance to educational need. Neither the editors of Journal title, nor its publishers, nor any other party involved in the preparation of material contained in represent or warrants that the information contained herein is in every respect accurate or complete, and they are not responsible for any errors or omissions or for the results obtained from the use of such material. Patients and consumers reading articles posted on the website of Journal title should review the information carefully with their professional healthcare provider. The information is not intended to replace medical advice offered by the physicians. Journal title and its publishers make no representations or warranties with respect to any treatment, action, or application of medication or preparation by any person following the information offered or provided. The Journal title and its publishers will not be liable for any direct, indirect, consequential, special, exemplary, or other damages arising there from.
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Contributors' form
The form below is for contributors to the journal to complete and submit once it is confirmed that their submission will be published in a forthcoming issue. It is also intended for contributors to prior issues who have not yet filled out an author agreement form.Please take care to fill out this form correctly, as there are no warnings on incomplete fields; and if done incorrectly it will need to be recompleted.
When you press 'Submit' this should open your email software, with an email you have to send. If possible please send the email using your institutional email account (e.g. @bpkihs.edu).
NOTE: This is an email based form, and requires that you use software such as Outlook Express or Apple Mail. If you do not use email software, please download and complete this Word document and then email it to redflowerppl@vsnl.net with 'Author Agreement Form' in the title.
Download Instructions
These ready to use templates are made to help the contributors write as per the requirements of the Journal.
Save the templates on your computer and use them with a word processor program.
Click open the file and save as the manuscript file.
In the program keep 'Document Map' and 'Comments' on from 'View' menu to navigate through the file.
Download Template for Original Articles/ABSTRACT Reports. (.DOT file)
Red Flower Publication recognizes the importance of the integrity and completeness of the scholarly record to researchers and librarians and attaches the highest importance to maintaining trust in the authority of its electronic archive.
Red Flower Publication's policy
It is a general principle of scholarly communication that the editor of a learned journal is solely and independently responsible for deciding which articles submitted to the journal shall be published. In making this decision the editor is guided by policies of the journal's editorial board and constrained by such legal requirements in force regarding libel, copyright infringement and plagiarism. An outcome of this principle is the importance of the scholarly archive as a permanent, historic record of the transactions of scholarship. Articles that have been published shall remain extant, exact and unaltered as far as is possible. However, very occasionally circumstances may arise where an article is published that must later be retracted or even removed. Such actions must not be undertaken lightly and can only occur under exceptional circumstances.
This policy has been designed to address these concerns and to take into account current best practice in the scholarly and library communities. As standards evolve and change, we will revisit this issue and welcome the input of scholarly and library communities. We believe these issues require international standards and we will be active in lobbying various information bodies to establish international standards and best practices that the publishing and information industries can adopt.
Article Withdrawal
Only used for Articles in Press which represent early versions of articles and sometimes contain errors, or may have been accidentally submitted twice. Occasionally, but less frequently, the articles may represent infringements of professional ethical codes, such as multiple submission, bogus claims of authorship, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data or the like. Articles in Press (articles that have been accepted for publication but which have not been formally published and will not yet have the complete volume/issue/page information) that include errors, or are discovered to be accidental duplicates of other published article(s), or are determined to violate our journal publishing ethics guidelines in the view of the editors (such as multiple submission, bogus claims of authorship, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data or the like), may be "Withdrawn" from us. Withdrawn means that the article content (HTML and PDF) is removed and replaced with a HTML page and PDF simply stating that the article has been withdrawn according to the Red Flower Publication Policy on Article in Press Withdrawal with a link to the current policy document.
Article Retraction
Infringements of professional ethical codes, such as multiple submission, bogus claims of authorship, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data or the like. Occasionally a retraction will be used to correct errors in submission or publication. The retraction of an article by its authors or the editor under the advice of members of the scholarly community has long been an occasional feature of the learned world. Standards for dealing with retractions have been developed by a number of library and scholarly bodies, and this best practice is adopted for article retraction by Red Flower Publications:
A retraction note titled "Retraction: [article title]" signed by the authors and/or the editor is published in the paginated part of a subsequent issue of the journal and listed in the contents list.
In the electronic version, a link is made to the original article.
The online article is preceded by a screen containing the retraction note. It is to this screen that the link resolves; the reader can then proceed to the article itself.
The original article is retained unchanged save for a watermark on the .pdf indicating on each page that it is "retracted."
The HTML version of the document is removed.
Article Removal: Legal limitations
In an extremely limited number of cases, it may be necessary to remove an article from the online database. This will only occur where the article is clearly defamatory, or infringes other's legal rights, or where the article is, or we have good reason to expect it will be, the subject of a court order, or where the article, if acted upon, might pose a serious health risk. In these circumstances, while the metadata (Title and Authors) will be retained, the text will be replaced with a screen indicating the article has been removed for legal reasons.
Article Replacement
In cases where the article, if acted upon, might pose a serious health risk, the authors of the original article may wish to retract the flawed original and replace it with a corrected version. In these circumstances the procedures for retraction will be followed with the difference that the database retraction notice will publish a link to the corrected re-published article and a history of the document.
For the majority of Red Flower Publication's journals you will receive a free electronic offprint (PDF-format) for your article for your personal use. For some journals you will have the choice between this free eOffprint and a given number of free paper offprints (the options are based on the respective agreement with the editors or society partners). You will find your offprint options on the journal's "offprints" order page.
The information below is intended only as general guidelines.
English, Hindi and Sanskrit language and translated reproductions of Red Flower Publications (P) Limited journal articles in bulk quantities may be supplied only by the Publishing Division of the Red Flower Publications (P) Limited or one of its Publishing Partners.
English, Hindi and Sanskrit language of articles in bulk quantities may be supplied only by the Publishing Division of the Red Flower Publications (P) Limited. Reprints may not be further reproduced in any manner without the express permission of Red Flower Publications (P) Limited.
Reprints may not be further reproduced in any manner without the express permission of Red Flower Publications (P) Limited journal.
Reprints are available in both paper and electronic formats upon publication. Reprints of articles from Red Flower Publications (P) Limited are for use only as standalone educational materials. Red Flower Publications (P) Limited journal does not permit reproduction of its name, logo, or text on promotional literature.
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Customers and their Authorized Users will have access to the full text of the Licensed Electronic Products covered by the applicable License. Customers and their Authorized Users may download, search, retrieve, display and view, copy and save to a secure network or other electronic storage media and store or print out single copies of individual articles or items for their own personal use, scholarly, educational or scientific research or internal business use. Customers and Authorized Users may also transmit such material to a third-party colleague in hard copy or electronically for personal use or scholarly, educational, or scientific research or professional use but in no case for re-sale, systematic distribution, e.g. posting on a listserv, network (including scientific social networks) or automated delivery, or for any other use (including distribution through social networking websites and scholarly collaboration networks, except for those that have agreed to Red Flower Publication’s Article Sharing Policy and solely in accordance therewith). In addition, Authorized Users have the right to use, with appropriate credit, figures, tables and brief excerpts from individual articles in the Licensed Electronic Product(s) in their own scientific, scholarly and educational works.
All Users have the option to create a My Profile Page which will allow them to create links to Electronic Product(s), articles of interest and search criteria which may be reused by them and manage their custom e-mail alerting services. In order to do so, Users must register. During the registration process, Users will select and register a user name and password which they must keep confidential and not disclose to or share with anyone else.
Except as provided above or with respect to material published on an open access basis, Users may not copy, distribute, transmit or otherwise reproduce, sell or resell material from Electronic Product(s); store such material in any form or medium in a retrieval system; download and/or store an entire issue of an Electronic Product or its equivalent; or transmit such material, directly or indirectly, for use in any paid service such as document delivery or list serve, or for use by any information brokerage or for systematic distribution, whether or not for commercial or non-profit use or for a fee or free of charge.
Users agree not to remove, obscure or modify any copyright or proprietary notices, author attribution or any disclaimer as they appear on Red Flower Publications. Users may not integrate material from the Electronic Product(s) with other material or otherwise create derivative works in any medium. However, brief quotations for purposes of comment, criticism or similar scholarly purposes are not prohibited herein.
Users may not do anything to restrict or inhibit any other User's access to or use of Red Flower Publications and the Electronic Product(s).
If a User refuses or fails to abide by these Terms of Use or violates any other terms of this Agreement, Red Flower Publications reserves the right in its sole discretion to suspend or terminate their access to Red Flower Publications and the Electronic Products immediately without notice, in addition to any other available remedies.
Users shall not have the right to incorporate any material from the Electronic Products into any institutional or other repository under any circumstances without Red Flower Publication’s prior written approval (including social networking websites and scholarly collaboration networks, except for those that have agreed to Red Flower Publication’s Article Sharing Policy and in accordance therewith).
Additional Terms
Red Flower Publications is not responsible for any charges associated with accessing Red Flower Publications and the Electronic Products, including, but not limited to, any computer equipment, telephone or internet connections and access software.
Upon payment of an invoice, the products in the invoice are covered by the Customer’s License on the terms and conditions therein.
Red Flower Publications may modify any of these terms and conditions at any time by providing notice on Red Flower Publications. A User’s continued use of Red Flower Publications shall be conclusively deemed acceptance of such modification.
Red Flower Publications may provide links to third-party websites. Where such links exist, Red Flower Publications disclaims all responsibility and liability for the content of such third-party websites. Users assume the sole responsibility for the accessing of third-party websites and the use of any content appearing on such websites.
Privacy and Data Protection Policy
Red Flower Publication recognizes the importance of protecting the information it collects in the operation of Red Flower Publications and will act in compliance with the Privacy Policy.
Warranty Limitations
RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS AND THE ELECTRONIC PRODUCTS AND ALL MATERIALS CONTAINED THEREIN ARE PROVIDED ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, WARRANTIES OF TITLE, OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE; THE USE OF THE ELECTRONIC PRODUCTS, RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS AND ALL MATERIALS IS AT THE USER'S OWN RISK; ACCESS TO RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS AND THE ELECTRONIC PRODUCTS MAY BE INTERRUPTED AND MAY NOT BE ERROR FREE; AND NEITHER RED FLOWER PUBLICATION NOR ANYONE ELSE INVOLVED IN CREATING, PRODUCING OR DELIVERING THE ELECTRONIC PRODUCTS OR THE MATERIALS CONTAINED IN RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS, SHALL BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USER'S USE OF OR INABILITY TO USE RED FLOWER PUBLICATIONS, THE ELECTRONIC PRODUCTS AND ALL MATERIALS CONTAINED THEREIN.
Article sharing policy
Scholarly research is by its nature collaborative. Teams of researchers and scientists in the academic and not-‐for-‐profit sectors share experience, expertise, and facilities in order to advance human knowledge and understanding. Nowhere is this more evident than in the sharing of scholarly articles – the majority of which include multiple authors, often from different institutions and countries. Sharing of articles and supplementary material is thus an important factor in advancing research.
As research groups have become more interdisciplinary and international, such sharing has increased, enabled by the rise of internet tools and technologies. Scholarly collaboration networks offer researchers the opportunity to discover and share articles and data, but the sharing experience can be inefficient, inconsistent, hindered by legal uncertainty and frustrating for academic researchers, institutions, collaboration networks and publishers.
We would like to make sharing of subscription and licensed content simple and seamless for academic researchers so that it is consistent with access and usage rights associated with articles while enhancing collaboration. We believe publishers and scholarly collaboration networks can work together to facilitate sharing, which benefits researchers, institutions, and society as a whole, with a core set of principles that maximize this experience for all.
Open Access publication provides one route to enable sharing but does not address sharing of subscription and licensed content. These voluntary principles are intended to address that gap, and be complementary to, not as a substitute for, Open Access publication or self-‐archiving. They are also not meant to address sharing by and between commercial organizations.
The signatories to these principles believe:
Publishers have a core commitment to facilitate the dissemination and discovery of their authors’ scholarly articles.
Sharing should be allowed within research collaboration groups, namely groups of scholars or researchers invited to participate in specific research collaborations. Such groups would:
be of the size that is typical for research groups of that discipline
only share articles within and for the purposes of the group
allow article sharing between subscribers and non-‐subscribers within the group
include commercial researchers, subject to publisher policy or appropriate licensing
include members of the wider public participating for the purposes of the group
Publishers and libraries should be able to measure the amount and type of sharing, using standards such as COUNTER, to better understand the habits of their readers and quantify the value of the services they provide.
Initiatives to facilitate sharing should:
be based on standards to support the tools and platforms required by researchers
be open to all participants supporting these principles
integrate access and usage rights and data reporting into research workflows
ensure that usage and activity data is managed in a manner consistent with personal privacy and security laws and requirements
Public posting of article metadata and open access articles in scholarly collaboration networks should be encouraged.
Publisher policies on research collaboration group sharing and public posting of articles should be clear and easily discoverable, and we call on publishers to work toward this goal.
Accepted Articles
Publishing your article: All these articles are accepted for publication in the respective journals and acceptance letters have been forwarded to all concerned authors. If you have not received acceptance letter yet; please contact us if you feel necessary.
Request for Permission/Republication
In order to enable us to process your request as quickly as possible, please complete this form as detailed and accurately as
possible. Please note that for some fields it might be necessary to select 2 or more boxes
The quality of a journal depends on the quality of articles published, which in turn depends upon the quality of refereeing process. Not only the quality in terms of the content, but also the quality in terms of providing early and fast reply to authors and the period from the receipt of an article to its publication depends on the referees. To say in minimum words, referees are the backbone of any peer-reviewed journal. 'World rely on journals and journals rely on referees' - such is the importance of a referee. We are fortunate to have the services of following experts for our review process.
Peer review is defined as the "critical assessment of manuscripts submitted to journals by experts who are not part of the editorial staff." Ninety-one percent of authors think that peer review improved the quality of their article. Reviewer's help authors hone key points, identify and resolve errors, and generate new ideas. Peer review ensures the integrity of science by excluding invalid or low-quality research.
Pre-refereeing stage
Upon receiving a new manuscript, the editorial office conducts initial pre-refereeing checks to ensure the article is legible, complete, correctly formatted, original, within the scope of the journal in question, in the style of a scientific article and written in clear English. Articles passing successfully through the pre-refereeing stage then begin formal peer review.
Refereeing stage
The journal editor invites reviewers who are experts in your article's subject matter to evaluate the article and provide feedback. Reviewers comment on a variety of points such as whether the study is well designed or if the results are too preliminary. The reviewers' feedback informs the editor's decision on whether to accept or reject the article. Red Flower Publication policy requires at least two qualified reviewers evaluate a submitted article before the editor can reach a decision.
The most common types of peer review are single-blind and double-blind review. In single-blind, the names of the reviewers are not shared with the author but the reviewers are aware of the author's identity. In double-blind, neither the author nor the reviewers are aware of each others' identity. In both models, the anonymity of the reviewer ensures that the reviewer can give an honest and impartial evaluation of the article. Most Red Flower Publication publications use the double-blind review format.
What are editors and reviewers looking for?
During the peer review process, editors and reviewers are looking for:
Scope: is the article appropriate for this publication?
Novelty: is this original material distinct from previous publications?
Validity: is the study well designed and executed?
Data: are the data reported, analyzed, and interpreted correctly?
Clarity: are the ideas expressed clearly, concisely, and logically?
Compliance: are all ethical and journal requirements met?
Advancement: is this a significant contribution to the field?
Red Flower Publication is committed to publishing high-quality material in its journals and most journals have quite high rejection rates, typically above 50%. Papers referees deem to be technically sound, but of limited interest, are usually rejected.
Use of an arbitrator
If the referees' reports are not in agreement, the paper and the reports are sent to an independent arbitrator (often a member of the journal's Editorial Board) who is first asked to form their own opinion of the paper and then to read the referees' reports and adjudicate between them. A decision is then made based on the arbitrator's recommendation. If a referee is overruled by an arbitrator, we will normally notify the referee of this.
Peer Review System
Features of electronic peer review system
Reproduces the functions of an editorial office on the web
Individualized password-protected area for each authority (Author, Reviewer, Editor and Staff)
Automated email notifications and reminders
Double-blind peer review
MEDLINE links for editors and referees
Handles manuscripts up to the stage of proofs and web-publishing
Platform independence,requires web-browser and internet connection only, no need of any special software or computer resources
Advantages of web-based manuscript processing
Accessibility from any PC
No normal business hours : Articles can be received and processed at any hour of the day
Faster clerical work
Reduced submission-decision time
Reduced postage/printing cost
Less enquiries from authors as they themselves can check and track the submitted articles
Easy record maintenance and performance tracking
Facilitates the use of the best referees and not just the nearest
Global authorship: Ease of submission for authors across the globe
Collaboration with editors located in different parts of the country or outside the country
Ease of alliance with the publisher or printer located at a different place
Unique features
Mobile text / SMS alerts
Reference checking
Plagiarism check
CME questions
CTR number
Single blind / double blind options
Multimedia files
Author side fee processing
Online Journal Site
Why go online
Researchers, as authors, require access to the largest possible audience to disseminate their findings; researchers, as readers, need the broadest possible access to the relevant literature
No time lag: An article can be "published" -- posted on the Web -- as soon as it is accepted and prepared for publication
Faster dissemination of scientific information by expediting peer review, editorial and production work, and distribution
Interactivity: Enabling letters to the editor and discussions concerning articles to be created and distributed online and linked to the articles in question
Reference linking: Linking to other electronic information, such as links between reference citations and article abstracts and between references to material on the Web and the remote sites themselves
No space limitations and no length limitations: Add extra on the site and save print cost
Articles available online via Open Access have higher impact rates than proprietary online and print articles
Beyond a simple website
Putting up a simple HTML or PDF-based website is not enough, a complete journal site needs more
Facility to conduct an extensive search across the full text of multiple journals.
Facility to submit comments or remarks on published article
Ability to go to other sites via reference and external linking
Linking from other sites so that visitors can reach this site including from PubMed
Good ranking with search engines enabling people to find your site
Moving with internatioal trend: Metatags (e.g. DC metadata), user statistics (e.g. similar to COUNTER code), site structure (e.g. OepnURL), multiple mirroring (e.g. archiving at OAI compliant servers), and more
Future-readiness with changing norms and technology should be able to adapt quickly
Unique features
Mobile / hand-held device optimization
Linking from PubMed, DOAJ, Cross Ref, etc.
Citation tracking and citation alerts
Linking for bacterial species names and eponyms
Revenue from AdSense, sales through secondary aggregating agencies, ALJC, etc.
Translation into multiple languages
Providing electronic data to bibliographic agencies such as PubMed, ISI, CABI, SCOPUS, DOAJ, etc.