How to Write Better Medical Papers
This book guides medical researchers through all stages of transforming their scientific data and ideas into a published paper. Many researchers in medicine, including the life sciences and health sciences, struggle to get their research written and published. Manuscripts are typically rejected and/or sent back for revisions several times before ever being published. One reason for this is that researchers have not received much instruction in the specific subjects and skills needed to write and publish scientific medical papers: research methodology, ethics, statistics, data visualization, writing, revising, and the practicalities of publishing.
Instead of wasting the reader's time discussing trivialities of punctuation, spelling, etc., this book tackles all the major scientific issues that routinely lead to manuscripts getting rejected from the journals. The section "Preparing" covers the range of methodological, ethical, and practical aspects that researchers need to address before starting to write their paper. The section "Analyzing" reviews commonplace problems in the statistical analysis and presentation, and how to resolve those problems. The section "Drafting" describes what to write in all the various parts of a paper (the Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion, Abstract, etc.) The section "Revising" explains and illustrates how to improve the writing style of any manuscript. The section "Publishing" discusses how to navigate the peer review process and all other practical aspects of the publishing phase.
This book draws on the author's decade of experience as an independent medical writer and research consultant, but it is not written merely as the personal opinion of yet another expert. The entire book is grounded in the existing scientific and scholarly literature, with extensive references and a lengthy annotated bibliography, so readerscan quickly obtain more information on any aspect they want. Thus this book provides a more evidence-based, scholarly account of how medical scientific papers should be written, in order to improve medical communication and accelerate scientific progress.
After reading this entire book cover to cover, medical researchers will know how to write better quality medical papers, and they will be able to publish their work in better journals with less time and struggle. This book is essential reading for anyone conducting research in clinical medicine, life sciences, or health sciences.
Introduction
Part I: PreparingEthics
Reading
Searching the Literature
Sinnamon's Rule
Protected Time
The Outline
Part II: Drafting
The Introduction
Study Aims
The Methods
Data Preparation
Statistics: General Principles
Statistics: Common Mistakes
The Results
Tables
Figures: General Guidance
Figures: Graphic Suggestions
The Discussion
Conclusions
Aligning the IMRD
Citing the Literature
The Abstract
The Title
Part III: Special Types of Articles
Brief Reports
Letters
Case Reports
Literature Reviews
Editorials
Part IV: Revising
The Need for Revision
Build Good Paragraphs
Edit Each Sentence
Choose the Right Words
Use "Plain English"
Cut it Down
Revise the Abstract and Title
Do a Two-Week Follow-Up
Get Internal Peer Review
Proof-Read the Manuscript
Part V: Publishing
Submission to the Journal
Authorship
Acknowledgments
References
The Cover Letter
Peer Review
Doing the Revisions
The Reply-to-Review Letter
Thanking the Journal Staff
Dissemination
Conclusion
Hanna, Michael
| ISBN | 978-3-030-02954-8 |
|---|---|
| Media type | Book |
| Copyright year | 2019 |
| Publisher | Springer, Berlin |
| Length | XI, 335 pages |
| Language | English |