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Instructions to Authors 2013
The
European Journal of Dermatology publishes
reviews and original articles pertinent to skin diseases and to the
structure and function of normal skin.
SUBMISSION SHOULD BE
MADE online at: http://libbey.fontismedia.com/ejd/
Dr Jean KANITAKIS
(France)
E-mail:
ejd.lyon@gmail.com
Dr Jean-François NICOLAS
(France)
E-mail :
ejd.lyon@gmail.com
Dr Andrea CAVANI
(Italy)
E-mail:
a.cavani@idi.it
Dr Ana GIMENEZ-ARNAU
(Spain)
E-mail:
22505aga@comb.es
Dr Michael HERTL
(Germany)
E-mail:
EJD-Marburg@med.uni-marburg.de
Submission.
Submission of an article is understood to imply
that the article is original and unpublished and not being
considered for publication elsewhere. The responsible author must
ensure that the article has been seen and approved by all the other
authors. All articles are subject to peer review by one or more
referees. Authors are invited to propose 3 potential reviewers with
their e-mail addresses. All submissions are subject to a
50 € processing charge, to be paid during the submission
process, via a secure page online. Authors of invited reviews,
letters concerning articles previously published in the EJD and
items to be published in the “Residents’ Corner” are not required
to pay submission fees. Authors of such papers should contact the
editorial office before submitting their article.
Copyright. Authors of
papers accepted for publication grant John Libbey Eurotext an
exclusive licence to publish, in return for which they can re-use
their papers in their future printed work without first requiring
permission from the publisher of the journal. Authors may archive
this version of the manuscript in their institution’s repositories
and, if they wish, on their personal websites. Authors should cite
the publication reference on any deposited version, and provide a
link from it to the URL of the published article on the journal’s
website.
Ethics. When reporting experiments on human and animal
subjects, authors should indicate whether the procedures followed
were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible
committee on human/animal experimentation (institutional or
regional) and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as amended in
1983. If in doubt, the authors must explain the rationale for their
approach and demonstrate that the institutional review board
explicitly approved the doubtful aspects of the study.
Clinical Trial
Registration. The European Journal of
Dermatology subscribes to the standards set forth by the
International Committee of Medical Journal Editors in the Lancet
(364:911-912, 2004), requiring that all trials that start enrolling
participants after July 1, 2005 must be registered in a suitable
publicly accessible register in order to be considered for
publication in the Journal.
Types of
articles. The European Journal of
Dermatology publishes articles in the following rubrics:
Editorials, Review Articles, Investigative Reports, Genes and Skin,
Therapy, Clinical Reports, Correspondence. Single case reports are
normally only considered suitable for publication as correspondence
items. Authors may propose the rubric for which they consider their
article is most suitable, although the final decision will be taken
by the Editor.
Correspondence includes
brief clinical and investigative reports and letters commenting
articles previously published in the journal. Correspondence items
MUST be limited to a maximum of 700 words, one figure/table (the
figure can be a mounted one) and ten references. No abstract/key
words are needed. All correspondence items are subject to possible
editing/abridgement.
Organisation of
manuscripts. Every part of the
manuscript should be numbered, beginning with the title page.
Standard manuscripts should include: title page, abstract,
introduction, materials and methods, results, discussion,
acknowledgements, references, tables, legends for fi
gures.
The Title
page should contain (1) the full title, (2) a short
title (3) full name(s) of the author(s), (4) complete postal
address(es) of the affi liation(s) of the author(s), indicating the
country in which the work was done, (5) an e-mail address to which
proofs and reprint requests will be sent, plus telephone and fax
numbers (6) the total number of words, figures, tables and
references.
The
Abstract should consist of no more than 250
words. Abstracts of Investigative Reports, Genes and Skin, Therapy
and Clinical Reports should be structured (Background, Objectives,
Materials & Methods, Results, Conclusion). Up to six key words
should be provided in alphabetical order at the end of the
abstract.
Materials and
Methods should clearly and concisely
describe all compounds and methods used so that these can be
reproduced. A note on the statistical methods used to evaluate the
results should also be included. The briefest form should always be
chosen for all data presented.
Acknowledgements. In
this section the authors must declare:
Financial
support from the pharmaceutical
industry or any other source. Grants and research contracts must
indicate the name of the person or unit which received aid. If
there has been no financial support, write NONE.
Conflict of
Interest. It is the responsibility of
the corresponding author to ensure that any conflict of interest of
any of the authors is disclosed. A declaration must be made, if
there is no conflict of interest, write NONE.
References.
Their number should be kept to the minimum
necessary to support the data and discussion; extensive lists of
references should be avoided. Number the references consecutively
as they appear in the text. List all authors if six or less,
otherwise list the first three authors followed by “et
al”. References concerning unpublished data and
‘personal communications’ should be cited parenthetically within
the text but not in the list of references. Abbreviate journal
names according to the listing in Index
Medicus.
Examples:
Journal article:
Barbaud A, Granel F, Waton
J, Poreaux C. How to manage hypersensitivity reactions to
biological agents? Eur J Dermatol 2011; 21:
667-74.
Advance online publication of a journal
article:
Morelon E, Kanitakis J,
Petruzzo P. Immunological issues in clinical composite tissue
allotransplantation: where do we stand today?
Transplantation 2012 Feb 2. doi:
10.1097/TP.0b013e31824728b8 [Epub ahead of print]
Entire Book:
Weedon D. Skin
Pathology. 3rd edn. Philadelphia: Churchill Livingstone,
2010.
Chapter in a Book:
Gawkrodger DJ. Sarcoidosis.
In: Burns T, Breathnach S, Cox N, Griffi ths C, eds.
Rook’s Textbook of Dermatology. 8th edn.
Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell Scientifi c Publications, 2010:
61.1-61.23.
Web citation:
U.S. Cancer Statistics
Working Group. United States Cancer Statistics: 1999–2007
Incidence and Mortality Web-based Report. Atlanta: U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention and National Cancer Institute; 2010.
Available at: www.cdc.gov/uscs (accessed 04 Feb 2012).
Figures and
diagrams should be referred to in the
text as “Fig.” and be given arabic numbers. The magnification
should be indicated directly on the figure using a bar and
including the corresponding measurement in the legend. The graphic
files must be saved as .JPEG. All figures and diagrams must be
accompanied by a legend. All type within the figures should be at
least size 9, using the following fonts: Helvetica, Arial, Times,
Courier, Symbol. Line art should have a resolution of approximately
1,000 dpi. Half-tone graphics (photographs or graphics with shades
of grey) should have a resolution of 300 dpi. A figure that is a
combination of both a half-tone and line art must have a resolution
of at least 500 dpi. Patients should have their identity concealed
or should give written consent to publication. In the event that
some of the illustrations are owned by third parties, the author
undertakes to obtain the necessary permission from the latter to
include the illustrations in the article and the distribution
thereof in this form. The manuscript must be accompanied by written
permission for publication.
Tables should be drawn in black ink on a white background.
Lines should be of sufficient thickness to withstand reduction.
There should be as few tables as possible and these should include
essential data only.
Units, symbols,
abbreviations. Measurements should be
in metric units (meter, kilogramme, liter) or their decimal
multiples. Temperature should be given in °C. Abbreviations should
be used sparingly and always given in full at the first
mention.
Proof
corrections are limited to
typographical errors. One set of page proofs will be sent by email
to the corresponding author who should return the corrected proofs
within two days of receipt. The copyright form will accompany the
proofs and must be returned with the corrected proofs. Following
publication, a .pdf copy of the article will be sent to the
corresponding author for personal use only.
Announcements. Brief
announcements of scientific meetings will be published at the
discretion of the Editor, if space permits. Announcements must
reach the editorial office at least 10 weeks before the publication
date.
Page charges.
All corresponding authors of accepted articles
(except for invited articles, letters concerning articles
previously published in the EJD and submissions to Residents’
Corner) will be asked to pay page charges of 200 €. Please note,
there is no charge for colour illustrations. An invoice will be
sent to the corresponding author of accepted articles at the same
time as the proofs and copyright transfer form. Authors may ask to
have their articles freely available in the online version of the
journal (open access); this will be charged at an extra 400
€.
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