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Scientific Writing

Scientific Writing. MCH Epidemiology Pre-conference Workshop Dec. 2011 Michael Kogan, Ph.D. Director U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB)

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Scientific Writing

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  1. Scientific Writing MCH Epidemiology Pre-conference Workshop Dec. 2011 Michael Kogan, Ph.D. Director U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) Office of Epidemiology, Policy and Evaluation Jody Zylke, MD Senior Editor Journal of the American Medical Association

  2. Schedule for Today • 8-8:15 -- Introduction of speakers and SWAT team • 8:15-8:45 – Why write & preparation needed to begin • 8:45-9:15 – What does an editor look for in a paper, tips on writing, and how to get started • 9:15-9:45 – How to write an introduction • 9:45-10:15 – Working with class on your introductions • 10:15-10:30 – Break • 10:30-11 – How to write a methods section • 11-11:30 – Working with class on your methods sections • 11:30-12 – How to write a results section • 12-1:30 – Lunch (Dr. Zylke’s treat)

  3. Schedule for Today (continued) • 1:30-2--Working with class on your results section • 2-2:30--How to write a discussion section • 2:30-3--Working with class on your discussion section • 3-3:15--Break • 3:15-3:45--How to write an abstract and titles • 3:45-4:15--Working with class on abstract and titles • 4:15-4:45--How to submit a paper to a journal • 4:45-5--Questions, additional work on papers

  4. The Scientific Writing SWAT Team • Paul Newacheck, PhD, University of California San Francisco • Russ Kirby, PhD, University of South Florida • Martha Wingate, PhD, University of Alabama at Birmingham • Stephen Blumberg, PhD, CDC, National Center for Health Statistics • Arden Handler, PhD, University of Illinois at Chicago

  5. Acknowledgements • Russ Kirby, PhD, University of South Florida • Paul Z. Siegel, MD, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  6. Why Should You Write for Publication? • It will help you to clarify your thinking on a topic • Thinking reduces risk of dementia • It is one of the main methods of communicating your work to other scientists • It carries the weight of being peer-reviewed • It can be more easily found and referenced by other scientists and MCH staff • Publications can be a determinant in hiring and promotions

  7. Laying the Groundwork before Writing

  8. Deciding Where to Send Your Paper • Does the journal employ blind peer-reviewing? (AJPH – yes, JAMA – no, MCHJ – yes, Pediatrics – no, NEJM - no) • How often do articles appearing in the journal get cited? (Look up the Journal Impact Factor) • Are there a large number of subscribers? • Is the journal listed in Index Medicus?

  9. Selected Impact Factors • NEJM 53 • Nature 36 • Lancet 34 • Cell 32 • Science 31 • JAMA 30 • PLOS 16 • BMJ 13 • American Journal of Epidemiology 5.75 • Pediatrics 5.4 • Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine 4.1

  10. Deciding Where to Send Your Paper • Does the journal process manuscripts in a reasonable amount of time? • Is there a long lag from acceptance to publication? • How many of their articles are published online ahead of print? • Is the journal’s subject matter, methodological, and theoretical orientation appropriate? • What is the journal’s acceptance rate? • What is the journal’s impact factor?

  11. Resource for Investigating these Questions • http://mulford.meduohio.edu/instr/ • This is a listing of “Instructions for Authors” from over 3500 journals in the health sciences • NOTE: ALWAYS FOLLOW THE SPECIFIC GUIDELINES FOR EACH JOURNAL

  12. Brevity is the sister of talent. -- Chekhov

  13. The best writing has no lace on its sleeves – Whitman

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