Tips On Writing Your Biomedical Research Paper and New Journal Policies To Know About
Tips On Writing Your Biomedical Research Paper and New Journal Policies To Know About
Tips On Writing Your Biomedical Research Paper and New Journal Policies To Know About
Mary Kemper
Medical Editor Mayfield Medical Communications
Mini quiz
Which part of a paper is most often read? In an abstract, give ~% for each section (Introduction, Methods, Results, Conclusions) Who is credited with the modern IMRAD format? What section should you usually write first? What 3 criteria constitute authorship? Cost to reuse your figure if published by JNS?
IMRAD
a mirror of your research process
Introduction Material & Methods Results And Discussion Ask a question Attempt to answer the question Obtain and compile data
Answer the question
~% rejected
96 80 to 90 75 60 to 66 52
Title
identifies central topic
Most often read Title and key words to index Title (general topic): subtitle (specific topic) Independent and dependent variables Name of species if not human Do not use abbreviations, jargon, chemical formulas, series identifiers Identify central topic: be creative
Running Title
Use independent and dependent variable Omit species Be creative Adhere to journal guidelines
Abstract
most important part of your paper
Introduction/background: what was the purpose (10%) Material and methods: what was the study design, techniques, and statistical methods (30-35%) Results: what are the most important findings (35-45%) Conclusions: why are the results important (20-25%)
Cornett, 2001
Cornett, 2001
2.
3. 4. 5. 6.
Identify guidelines, meeting or journal Highlight key features Insert sentences into abstract format Write, revise, and condense Edit sentences and words Check final
IMRAD
Concept originated by Pasteur Established by American Standards Institute in 1972 Serves as an organizational format Know the nuances of your journals format IMRAD is a format, each paper differs
Introduction
begin to tell a story
Part 1 2 3 Begin with what is known State what is unknown End with what your study will answer
Introduction, Part 1
what is known
Begin with a background statement or 2 to describe scope of study Give enough background to introduce the problem, but not overwhelm Give background specific to your topic Move your story forward
Introduction, Part 2
what is unknown
Describe what gaps your paper fills Mention other abstracts and preliminary reports Avoid using names of other investigators Keep references to a minimum Omit unnecessary detail
Introduction, Part 3
what your study will answer
State your specific research question Precede with a phrase that the answer is coming, In this study, we or To answer this question, we Repeat key terms: title, objectives, independent and dependent variables, species, etc. Be sure what is new and what is important are evident Awaken interest
Material:
chemicals, experimental materials, animals or humans Methods: preparation, protocol, purposes of protocol and methods, methods, data analysis
Anatomical Materials
Study Design
Include sentence about compliance Example: The protocol was approved by the IRB of each participating hospital Example: The study was a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled designed to compare Provide IRB protocol number
Important: Patient Authorization or Waiver of Authorization from IRB required to view patient charts
Study Protocol
what was done
Repeat description of study population Give inclusion and exclusion criteria Explain how study was randomized for a randomized trial Explain how you project target sample size and end points Account for all materials (drugs, culture media, buffers, gases, subjects, instruments/equipment, etc.)
Study Protocol
(continued)
If questionnaire, tell how administered and by whom Include methods that failed to lead to desired conclusion If method is not well established, explain and give references Use tables (e.g., patient characteristics) and figures (e.g., surgical step) to clarify Explain limitations in brief
Study Protocol
(continued)
Last paragraph is statistical analysis -how data are summarized, statistical test, measurements compared, P value Consult statistician early Use subheadings Write in past tense Use either passive or active voice or both
Results
what were the findings
Functions: state results of experiments and present data that supports results Content: results and data Consistency: check this in results, discussion, and abstract Organization: chronological or from most to least important
Results
uses the same order as Methods
Material & Methods Study subjects Study protocol Calculations Statistical analysis
Results Clinical characteristics Systemic effects Specific effects Adverse effects
Results
see the forest through the trees
Be brief and uncluttered Mention species and material again Use past tense Give specific comparisons Present detailed data in figures and tables to keep written data to a minimum Express results, give data Provide appropriate statistical details Begin each paragraph with a result
Visual data
Type of visual Flow charts (algorithms) Tables Line graphs Bar graphs Pie charts What it summarizes Protocols Complex data Response to treatment Complex data to compare categories Percentage of the whole
Diagrammatic illustrations
Discussion
what do your findings mean
Answers the question posed in Introduction Explain the significance of your results Explain the findings, relationships, and generalizations of your results Explains how results support answers and how answers fit with existing knowledge on the topic Has a beginning, middle, and end
Part 1, Beginning
present strongest evidence first Begin with significance of your results
Never
begin with background information Never repeat information from Introduction Never begin with historical overviews This is what everyone is waiting for!
Part 2, Middle
interpret your results
Show
how your results fit into the literature and how they support your answer Give in descending order of importance Compare your results with other studies, your work or others Use one idea per paragraph
Authorship
an ethical consideration
Involvement in Study
High
Included in acknowledgments
List as author
Low
Included in acknowledgments
High
Final checklist
Author affiliations correct (include TNI)? Is your story clear? Do abstract and paper agree? Each method has a result? Each result has a method? Each reference cited? Tables and figures numbered consecutively? Do you meet journal requirements?*
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