Format of Dissertation: 1) Sections in Part I. - Title Page
Format of Dissertation: 1) Sections in Part I. - Title Page
The different sections in the part I and II of the dissertation are formatted
as per description given below.
1) Sections In Part I.
i. Title Page
It is the very first page of dissertation. The title is a concise statement
identifying actual variables or theoretical issues under investigation and
the relation between them. A title should be in minimum possible words
that adequately describes the contents of research work/study all the
words in the title are to be chosen with great care and the association with
one another properly sequenced. This is also important for indexing the
study. The title does not contain any abbreviation, chemical formulae,
proprietary names and jargons etc.
The title should be written on the top in bold letters, followed by full name
of trainee in the order of first, middle, initial and last name alongwith the
highest academic degree. Then full name of Supervisor is mentioned
under whom the entire research work/study has been completed together
with his/her highest academic degree. At the bottom the name of depart-
ment and institution is to be given, where research work/study has been
conducted. The date of submitting Dissertation is given at the lowest end
of the title page.
ii.Supervisor’s Certificate
It is placed after the acknowledgement and is numbered in the Roman
numeral.
iii.
Dediction
It is an optional section, in which trainees normally dedicate their
Dissertation to their parents, brother, sister, teachers, friends, spouses
and/or children. The dedication is written in the center of a separate page
in one or two lines and numbered in Roman numerals.
iv. Acknowledgement
This section is designed to offer thanks or appreciation to the efforts of
individuals or organizations for help, advice or financial and material
assistance extended by them during the research work/study. The trainees
should not forget to mention the names of there colleagues, statisticians,
the computer operator and spouse, if applicable, as well as the supervisor.
This is the best place to show gratitude and appreciation. Technical help
and other contributions like financial and material support are
acknowledged in a separate paragraph. This section is placed after the
dedication on a separate page and numbered in Roman numerals.
i. Structured Abstract
It is the first section of the dissertation. The abstract is a brief account of
the dissertation, summarizing the information given in each major section.
It is different from the conclusion and identifies the basic contents of the
dissertation. It is written in past tense, emphasizing on important aspects
of the dissertation. The abstract is around 250 pages words written under
the following headings:
l introduction
l objectives
l main outcome measures,
l study design
l setting
l subjects
l methods
l results
l conclusions.
At the end of abstract, three to ten (3-10) key words are identified and
written. Selected key words should be from the Medical Subject Headings
(MeSH), List of Index
iv. Objectives
Objectives are statements of intentions. They inform the reader clearly
what the researcher plans to do in his/her work. The must identify the vari-
ables involved in research.
Objective should start with an action verb and be sufficiently specific,
measurable, achievable, relevant and time bound (SMART).
v. Operational Definition:
May be required in some cases. It is definition of a term specifically telling
how it will be measured for e.g.:
vi. Hypothesis:
A hypothesis is a statement showing expected relation between two
variables.
SAMPLE SELECTION:
Inclusion criteria: on what bases were patients inducted in the
study.
Exclusion criteria: on what bases were patients be excluded from
the study.
viii. Results
The results should be in logical sequence with the main results being
stated first. The data should be reported in sufficient detail to justify the
conclusions. The results section should include the:
l Number of subjects in the study at its inception.
l Statistics describing the study population, and the number of subjects
who were excluded.
l Number of subjects dropped out, or lost at any point in the study.
l To illustrate the main effects, the data should be presented in
appropriate tables and figures.
l Data in tables or figures should not be repeated in the text where only
important observations should be summarized.
l When data is statistically analyzed, information should be included
about the tests of significance (such as chi-square or t-test) used,
obtained magnitude or value of the test, the degrees of freedom, the
probability level. Results should be presented in terms of confidence
intervals wherever possible.
l If one statistical test has been used throughout the manuscript, the test
should be clearly stated in the methods section. If more than one sta-
tistical test have been used, the statistical tests performed should be
discussed in the methods and the specific test used reported along with
the results.
ix. Discussion
The writing skills of a trainee are best projected in this section of the
dissertation. It is meant to fit the results of current research work into
pre-existing pool of knowledge.
l If a hypothesis existed, whether the hypothesis was supported or
refuted by the results should be addressed.
l The results of the study should be examined and interpreted, and
implications described.
l The limitations of the study should be discussed, including possible
sources of bias and how these problems might affect conclusions and
generatizability.
l The implications for clinical practice, in any specific directions for future
research may be offered.
x. Conclusion(s)
This is the last section of the text in which conclusions or inferences drawn
on the basis of the results of study are described. The conclusions should
be linked with the objectives of the study. Recommendations for further
research may be included when appropriate e.g. if you find a statistically
significant number of cases of anemia of severe degree in the school
going girls of a particular area you can recommend further research to
probe the cause of anemia in that area. It is important to be careful that
the conclusions should not go beyond data and should be based on
the study results and population.
xi. References
CPSP follows the Vancouver reference style.
References are serially numbered in the order in which these are
mentioned in the text e.g., for the first cited reference the trainee may
either put "1" at superscript or in parenthesis at the most relevant place in
the sentence. This reference will then be listed at serial number "1" in the
References section of the Dissertation. The next reference will be marked
as number "2" at superscript or in parenthesis and listed at number
"2" in the References section and so on.