Instructions for Authors (Editorial policy)
Enacted in September 18, 2012 / Revised in April 22, 2015
Revised in December 20, 2013 / Revised in April 1, 2017
Revised in July 16, 2014 / Revised in July 26, 2017
Revised in September 30, 2014 / Revised in April 30, 2018
Revised in July 31, 2021 / Revised in August 15, 2024
Ewha Medical Journal (EMJ) is an open access, peer-reviewed journal published quarterly by Ewha Womans University College of Medicine and Ewha Medical Research Institute (last day of April, July, October, and January). EMJ aims to publish high-quality research and information at the intersection of biomedical science, clinical practice, and medical education, presented in understandable, clinically useful formats to inform health care practice and improve patient outcomes.
Manuscripts should adhere to the Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing, and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals, issued by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE; http://www.icmje.org/recommendations/), unless otherwise specified.
Contact Us
Editorial Office:
Ewha Medical Research Institute, 25, Magokdong-ro 2-gil, Gangseo-gu, Seoul 07804, Korea
Tel: +82-2-2650-5851, Email: E600091@ewha.ac.kr
1. Article processing charge
2. Research and publication ethics
3. Manuscript preparation
4. Manuscript submission, peer review process & post-publication discussions
5. Abbreviations, Acronyms and Unit
1. Article Processing Charge
There are no author submission fees or other publication-related charges. All cost for the publication process is supported by the Publisher.
2. Research and Publication Ethics
It is available at: https://www.e-emj.org/info/ethics
3. Manuscript Preparation
A. Article type
EMJ publishes seven categories of publications: original articles, review articles, case reports, health statistics, guidelines, protocols, data paper, images and solutions, editorials, opinions, correspondence, and letters to the editor. Other publication types are negotiable with editorial office.
Original articles: Original articles present results of basic and clinical investigations that are well-documented and meet the scrutiny of critical readers.
Review articles: Invited reviews provide a comprehensive analysis of specific topics. Submitted reviews should be systematic reviews and meta-analyses covering topics of interest.
Case reports: Case reports are published under exceptional circumstances to illustrate rare occurrences of clinical significance. They should address important issues for medical researchers and preferably include helpful illustrations..
Health statistics: Health statistics primarily focus on presenting and analyzing quantitative data related to health, healthcare, and public health. The content should contain numerical data, statistical analyses, and trends related to various health indicators, disease prevalence, healthcare utilization, mortality rates, and other health-related metrics. Data sources are usually from national health surveys, registries, administrative databases, or other large-scale data collection efforts.
Guidelines: Clinical practice guidelines and other types of guidelines are welcomed. Clinical practice guidelines are systematically developed statements designed to assist practitioners and patients in making decisions about appropriate healthcare for specific clinical circumstances. Reporting Guidelines provide structure for reporting research studies to improve the quality and transparency of research reporting Ethics guidelines address ethical considerations in clinical practice or research.
Protocols: Protocols comprehensively and precisely describe a planned or ongoing research study. It typically includes background and rationale for the study, specific objectives or hypotheses, detailed methodology (study design, participants, interventions, outcomes), statistical analysis plan, ethical considerations, and dissemination plans for results.
Data paper: Data papers aim to provide detailed descriptions of datasets, making them discoverable, citable, and reusable by other researchers. A data paper typically includes description of the dataset, methods used to collect the data, data validation and quality control procedures, information on how to access the data, any limitations or caveats about the data.
Images and solutions: These manuscripts are published for educational purposes only under exceptional circumstances, when they illustrate rare occurrences of clinical importance.
Editorials: Editorials are invited comments on recently accepted manuscripts, published subjects, present emerging topics, or interesting events.
Opinions: Opinion pieces offer creative perspectives on medical issues.
Correspondence: Correspondence typically provides a platform for readers to discuss current issues in medicine or share brief observations and opinions. Correspondence includes brief reports of novel findings, discussions of timely medical issues, professional opinions on current topics in medicine, or other topics not dealt as a formal article.
Letters to the editor: Letters provide rapid publication of new findings of unique importance in clinical settings, recent opinions on articles, or topics of interest published in the journal.
Others: Other publication types, such as important announcements in medicine or medical education, may be accepted. Contact the editorial office to discuss the required format with the Editorial Board. Articles from medical students are accepted at the editors' discretion.
B. General requirements
Language: Manuscripts for original or review articles may be written in Korean or English. Manuscripts for case reports or images and solutions should be written in English. Proper proofreading is required.
File format: Submissions should be uploaded as Microsoft Word files, with figures in separate files. Manuscripts must be double-spaced on A4 paper (210 × 297 mm) with 30 mm margins on all sides. Number all manuscript pages consecutively, starting with the abstract as page 1. Do not include authors’ names or affiliations in the manuscript.
Anonymization: Submit the title page and manuscript as separate files, ensuring the manuscript is anonymized for double-blind peer review.
Units & terms: Use SI units and follow Dorland's Illustrated Medical Dictionary for medical terminology.
Use of generative artificial intelligence (AI) platforms-assisted technologies: EMJ has adopted policies, as specified by the ICMJE, regarding the use of generative AI platforms assisted technologies in the preparation of materials intended for publication in the journal if they are not provided as below:
Generative AI platforms, including language models, chatbots, image creators, or similar technologies, may be employed to enhance readability and language accuracy in scientific writing. However, chatbots or other AI-assisted technologies cannot be listed as authors. Authors are generally not required to disclose whether AI-assisted technologies were used in the production of the submitted work at the time of manuscript submission. However, if the statistical analyses were made by AI-assisted technologies, the authors should disclose it with details about the specific tools used, including the model name, version, and manufacturer, along with an explanation of the capacity in which they were utilized. If simulated data or other essential data are generated by AI-assisted technologies, it should be disclosed. Authors should affirm that there is no plagiarism of text or images in materials produced by AI. The authors have responsibility for AI-assisted work. It is not acceptable to cite AI-generated material as a primary source in the References section. AI-generated material used for analysis should be disclosed as a supplementary material. The editorial office uses a tool to check for AI-generated text.
C. Key features
Key features and limits of articles are summarized in Table 1 below. However, the limits are negotiable with the editor.
Table 1. Key features and limits of articles
Type of article | Abstract (words) | Text (words)* | References | Tables and figures |
---|---|---|---|---|
Original article | Structured, 250 | 3,000 | 40 | 10 |
Review article | 250 | 5,000 | 50 | 10 |
Case report | 150 | 2,000 | 20 | 10 |
Health statistics | 250 | 3,000 | 40 | 15 |
Guidelines | 250 | 5,000 | 100 | 15 |
Protocols | 250 | 3,000 | 40 | 10 |
Data paper | 250 | 3,000 | 40 | 10 |
Images and solution | NR | 1,500 | 10 | 5 |
Editorial | NR | 1,500 | 10 | 5 |
Opinion | NR | 1,500 | 10 | 5 |
Correspondence | NR | 1,500 | 10 | 5 |
Letter to the editor | NR | 1,500 | 10 | 5 |
NR, not required
*Excluding abstract, references, tables, and figure legends.
D. Reporting guidelines
For specific study designs, such as randomized controlled trials, diagnostic accuracy studies, meta-analyses, observational studies, and non-randomized studies, authors should follow the relevant reporting guidelines. Recommended sources include the EQUATOR Network (https://www.equator-network.org/) and the National Library of Medicine (https://www.nlm.nih.gov/services/research_report_guide.html).
EMJ requires compliance with the reporting guidelines summarized in Table 2 for the listed article types.
Table 2. Reporting guidelines for specific study designs
Initiative | Type of study | Source |
---|---|---|
CONSORT | Randomized controlled trials | https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/consort/ |
TREND | Non-randomized controlled study | https://www.cdc.gov/trendstatement/index.html |
STROBE | Observational studies | https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/strobe/ |
STARD | Diagnostic/prognostic studies | https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/stard/ |
PRISMA | Systematic reviews and meta-analyses | https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/prisma/ |
CARE | Case reports | https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/care/ |
AGREE | Clinical practice guidelines | https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/the-agree-reporting-checklist-a-tool-to-improve-reporting-of-clinical-practice-guidelines/ |
SPIRIT | Protocol | https://spirit-statement.org |
COREQ | Qualitative study | https://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/coreq/ |
E. Manuscript organization for original article
Organize your manuscript file as follows:
Title page (upload separately)
Manuscript file: 1) Abstract & keywords, 2) Body text, 3) References list (beginning on a new page), 4) Tables (each beginning on a new page), 5) Figures legends (upload figures in separate files)
Supplementary materials (upload separately)
F. Title page
This section should include the type of manuscript; manuscript title; running title; full names and affiliations of all authors; full name, institutional affiliation, postal address, and email of the corresponding author; ORCID; authors’ contributions; any conflict of interest; any financial assistance; data availability; and acknowledgments.
Running title: Less than 10 words
Author names: Names of authors should be given in full without abbreviation. In the listing of author names, any degree or professional title, such as MD or PhD, should not be included.
Affiliations: Departments and institutions of the authors. If from multiple institutions, use superscript numbers (1, 2, 3, etc.) to indicate specific affiliations.
Corresponding author: Full name, institutional affiliation, postal address, and email address.
ORCID: Providing ORCIDs for all authors is recommended (https://orcid.org/).
Authors' contributions: Describe contributions using the Contributor Roles Taxonomy (CRediT; https://credit.niso.org/). Contributors must meet at least one core role (conceptualization, data curation, formal analysis, investigation, methodology, software, validation) and one writing role (original draft preparation, review, and editing). Authors who do not meet these requirements will not qualify for authorship.
Conflict of interest: Disclose any potential conflicts of interest, including employment, consultancy, ownership, or close relationships with organizations affected by the manuscript. If none, include the statement: “No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.”
Funding: Funding for the research should be detailed here. Provision of a FundRef ID is recommended, including the name of the funding agency, country, and (if available) the number of the grant provided by the funding agency. If the funding agency lacks a FundRef ID, please ask that agency to contact the FundRef registry (e-mail: fundref.registry@crossref.org).
Data availability: Include a statement indicating where the data supporting the article's results can be found, with hyperlinks to publicly archived datasets if applicable.
Acknowledgments: List contributors who do not meet authorship criteria, such as those providing technical help, writing assistance, or general support. Disclose any writing assistance and the entity that funded it.
Supplementary materials: Supplemental material refers to files related to a specific article, provided by the authors for publication alongside their article. These materials typically include additional content that could not be included in the print version, such as appendices or extra tables. All supplemental materials will be available online alongside the full-text article. Include a listing of supplementary materials at the end of the manuscript file, and ensure they are cited consecutively in the text of the manuscript.
G. Abstract & keywords
Abstract: For original articles, provide a structured abstract of less than 250 words with the following headings: Objectives, Methods, Results, Conclusion. Ensure all data in the abstract appear in the manuscript text or tables. For review articles, provide an unstructured abstract of up to 250 words. For case reports, provide an unstructured abstract of up to 150 words. The limit of the word count for other publication types is available at Table 1.
Keywords: List up to five keywords in alphabetical order at the bottom of the abstract. Refer to Medical Subject Headings (MeSH, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/MBrowser.html) for keyword selection.
H. Main text
The main text of an original article must be prepared under the following subheadings: Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion. Case report should be organized with Introduction, Case Presentation, and Discussion. In addition to these types, manuscripts that fall under specific reporting guidelines must be prepared accordingly.
Introduction: Provide a brief background, referencing the most relevant papers to inform readers. Describe pertinent findings of others and include the specific questions addressed by your investigation.
Methods: Organize this section as follows: ethics statement, study design, materials and/or participants, methods, and statistical analysis. For a more specific description, refer to the specific reporting guidelines corresponding to the study design (Table 2).
Ethics statement: For studies involving human participants or human-originated material, include the IRB approval number and informed consent. For animal investigations, state adherence to national research committee guidelines. If no IRB number is available, discuss this with the editor during the review process.
Study design: State the study design, whether it is a descriptive analysis, randomized controlled study, cohort study, or meta-analysis.
Materials and/or participants: Clearly detail the materials used in the research to facilitate follow-up studies. List any purchased materials with their source or manufacturer. Describe research participants with parameters such as age, sex, region, school, country, date of intervention period, occupation, etc. Explain reasons for inclusion or selection of participants and reasons for excluding certain groups. Non-English questionnaires may be included as supplementary materials.
Methods: Reference reporting guidelines when describing analytic methods. Cite well-known methods with references and note any modifications. Describe novel methods precisely. Document complicated statistical analyses in the supplementary materials if necessary. Clearly state the duration of observation, survey, experiment, analysis, or follow-up.
Statistical analysis: Meticulously describe the statistical analysis. State the computer programs used for statistical analysis, including the name, manufacturer, and software version. Include measurement error or uncertainty, such as confidence intervals along with P-values.
Additionally, ensure the correct use of the terms "sex" (biological factors) and "gender" (identity, psychosocial, or cultural factors). Unless inappropriate, report the sex and/or gender of study participants, as well as the sex of animals or cells, and describe the methods used to determine these. If the study involves an exclusive population, such as only one sex, provide a justification, except in obvious cases (e.g., prostate cancer). Define how race or ethnicity was determined and justify their relevance.
Results: Present findings logically using text, tables, and figures. Avoid excessive repetition of table or figure contents. Emphasize or summarize important observations at the end of this section.
Discussion: Interpret data concisely without repeating material from the Results section. Speculation is allowed if supported by the data and well-founded. The summary and conclusion should be brief, written in the context of the research purpose.
I. References
All references should be listed in the order of citation in the text, with corresponding numbers.
- Identify references in the main text with corresponding numbers in square brackets. For example, “K-HINT has been developed [1,2].” for the first two in-text citations.
- List all authors up to a maximum of six. For papers with more than six authors, list the first three followed by “et al.”
- Use the abbreviated journal title according to the NLM Catalog (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nlmcatalog/journals) and the List of KoreaMed Journals (https://koreamed.org/JournalBrowserNew.php). Other types of references not described below should follow Citing medicine: The NLM style guide for authors, editors, and publishers (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK7256/).
- Examples of reference style
- Journal articles
1. Cho CM, Cheong HI, Lee JW. Severe acute kidney injury with familial renal hypouricemia confirmed by genotyping of SLC22A12. Ewha Med J 2020;43(2):35-38.https://doi.org/10.12771/emj.2020.43.2.35
2. Bernsdorf M, Balslev E, Lykkesfeldt AE, Kroman N, Harder E, von der Maase H, et al. Value of postoperative reassessment of estrogen receptor α expression following neoadjuvant chemotherapy with or without gefitinib for estrogen receptor negative breast cancer. Breast Cancer Res Treat 2011;128(1):165-170. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10549-011-1535-x
3. Suzuki S, Kajiyama H, Shibata K, Ino K, Nawa A, Sakakibara K, et al. Is there any association between retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy and survival benefit in ovarian clear cell carcinoma patients? Ann Oncol 2008 Mar 19 [Epub]. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/
- Entire book and book chapter
4. Gordon PH, Nivatvongs S. Principles and practice of surgery for the colon, rectum and anus. 2nd ed. St Louis: Quality Medical Publishers; 1992.
5. Dozois RR. Disorders of the anal canal. In: Sabiston DC, Lyerly HK, editors. Textbook of surgery: the biological basis of modern surgical practice. 15th ed. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders; 1997. p.1032-1044.
- Online sources
6. American Cancer Society. Cancer reference information [Internet]. Atlanta (GA): American Cancer Society; c2009 [cited 2010 Aug 10]. Available from: http://www.cancer.org/docroot/CRI/CRI_0.asp
7. National Cancer Information Center. Cancer incidence [Internet]. Goyang (KR): National Cancer Information Center; c2009 [cited 2010 Aug 10]. Available from: http://www.cancer.go.kr/cms/statics
J. Tables and figures
Tables: Each table should begin on a new page, with the table number and title above the table and explanatory notes below. Table numbers must correspond to the order in which they are cited in the text. Tables should be self-explanatory, and the data presented should not be duplicated in the text or figures.
- Designate all units of measurement and concentration.
- Indicate footnotes with symbols in the following order: 1), 2), 3), 4), 5), 6).
- List abbreviations in a footnote in alphabetical order.
- Avoid unnecessary longitudinal lines.
- If using previously published tables, cite the source in the footnote.
Figures:
- Color and grayscale images should be at least 300 dpi. Line drawings must be high-quality black on white graphics.
- Each figure should be submitted as a single file in PPT, JPG, GIF, or PDF format.
- Figure numbers should correspond to the order in which they are mentioned in the text.
- Figure legends should be listed after the reference list in the manuscript file. Legends should provide a brief but comprehensive explanation of all figure information. Include the name of the stain and magnification for light microscopic photographs.
- If the figure has been previously published, cite the source in the legend.
Videos: Video files must be compressed to the smallest possible size while maintaining high resolution and quality.
- Video submissions should be in MPEG4, AVI, WMV, or ASF format.
- Videos should be no larger than 30 MB and no longer than 5 minutes.
- Include a video legends page with a brief description of the content of each video, beginning on a new page after the figure legends page.
Permission: If any tables or figures are taken or modified from other papers, authors should obtain permission through the Copyright Clearance Center (https://www.copyright.com/) or from the individual publisher, unless the materials are from an open access journal under the Creative Commons license. For open access journal materials, simply verify the source in the accompanying footnote. Note the distinction between free-access and open access journals: permission from the publisher is required for using tables or figures from free-access journals.
Examples:
- Reprinted (Modified) from Tanaka et al. [48], with permission of Elsevier.
- Reprinted (Modified) from Weiss et al. [2], according to the Creative Commons License.
K. Organization of other types
Review articles: If it is a narrative review, it consisted of Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion. In the Methods section, the ethics statement, study design, and literature search strategy should be mentioned. In the Discussion section, interpretation, suggestions, limitations, and conclusion should be mentioned. If the manuscript is a systematic review or meta-analysis, it should be described according to the PRISMA statement in Table 2.
Case reports: It should be described according to CARE statement in Table 2.
Health statistics: It should be described according to the STROBE statement in Table 2.
Guidelines: Clinical practice guidelines should be described according to the AGREE in Table 2. Other guidelines can be described based on AGREE,but not mandatory.
Protocols: It should be described according to the SPIRIT in Table 2.
Data paper: It consisted of Introduction, Methods, Data, and Discussion. Data should be available publicly from data archiving sites, including Zenodo, Harvard Dataverse, Open Science Framework, and Genbank.
Images and solutions: No sectional division is required. Image and interpretation are enough.
Editorials: No specific format is required.
Opinions: No specific format is required.
Correspondences: No specific format is required.
Letters to the editor: Add the target article and mention the comment.
4. Manuscript submission, peer review process & post-publication discussions
A. Online submission
Manuscripts can be submitted directly to EMJ via the journal’s submission page (https://submission.e-emj.org/). After registering and logging into your account, the online system will guide you through the submission process step-by-step. Detailed submission instructions are available on the website. For assistance, please contact us via email at E600091@ewha.ac.kr.
B. Peer review process
It is available at: https://www.e-emj.org/info/policy#t2.
C. post-publication discussions
It is available at: https://www.e-emj.org/info/policy#t2.
5. Abbreviations, Acronyms and Unit
The Ewha Medical Journal provides a list of the official abbreviations. Otherwise, any unofficial abbreviation should be used where they appear in the text at least three times, and be explained in parentheses at the first time in the text. Do not use abbreviation(s) in the title.
Abbreviations, Acronyms and Unit (PDF)
Abbreviations
Combining Prefixes
Units
Statistical Terms
Enacted in September 18, 2012 / Revised in April 22, 2015
Revised in December 20, 2013 / Revised in April 1, 2017
Revised in July 16, 2014 / Revised in July 26, 2017
Revised in September 30, 2014 / Revised in April 30, 2018
Revised in 2021. 07. 31
The Ewha Medical Journal (Ewha Med J) is the official journal of Ewha Womans University College of Medicine and Ewha Medical Research Institute, and is published quarterly (last day of April, July, October and January). Manuscripts should comply with the instructions for the journal.
How to Prepare a Manuscript
Determination of Article Type
1. Original articles
1) The manuscript of an original article should be organized in the following order: Title Page, Abstract and keywords, main text (Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion), Acknowledgements, References, Tables, Figures Legends and Figures.
2) Main text
- (1) Introduction: Briefly describe the purpose of the investigation, including relevant background information.
- (2) Methods: Describe the research plan, the materials (or subjects), and the method used, in that order. Explain in detail how the disease was confirmed and how subjectivity in observations was controlled. When experimental methodology is the main subject of the manuscript, describe the process in detail to allow readers to recreate the experiment as closely as possible.
- (3) Results: Results should be presented in logical sequence in the text, tables and illustrations and repetitive presentation of the same data in a different format should be avoided. The results should not include material appropriate to the discussion.
- (4) Discussion: Observations pertaining to the results of the research and other related materials should be interpreted for your readers. Emphasize new and important observations; do not merely repeat the contents of the results. Explain the meaning of the observation together with its limits, and within the limits of the results connect the conclusion to the purpose of the research. In a concluding paragraph, summarize the results and their meaning.
2. Review articles
1) A review is invited by the editor and should be a comprehensive analysis of a specific topic.
2) The manuscript of a review article should be organized as follows: Title Page, Abstract and keywords, Introduction, Main Text, Conclusion, Acknowledgments, References, Tables, Figure Legends, and Figures.
3) Review articles require an unstructured abstract equal to or less than 250 words.
3. Case reports
1) The manuscript for a case report should be organized as follows: Title Page, Abstract and keywords, Introduction, Case(s), Discussion, Acknowledgments, References, Tables, Figure Legends, and Figures.
2) The Abstract should be unstructured, and its length should not exceed 150 words. The maximum length of a manuscript is 10 pages including tables and figures with no more than 15 references and no more than 6 authors.
4. Images and solution
1) This type of manuscript will be published only for educational purposes under exceptional circumstances, when they illustrate a rare occurrence of clinical importance.
2) The manuscript should be organized as follows: Title Page, Body, References, Figure Legends and Figures.
5. Letter to the editor
A letter sent to the Journal about issues of concern to its readers, to support or oppose a stance taken by the publication, to respond another author’s opinion, to spread mass awareness and to analyze various policies in the medical field. There is no limitation regarding format.
6. Other publication types
Other publication types such as important announcements for medicine or medical education may be accepted. Articles from medical students can be accepted according to the editors’ decision. The required format can be discussed with the Editorial Board.
Required Format
1. Language
Manuscripts for original articles or review articles can be written in Korean or English. Manuscripts for case reports or images and solution should be written in English. An appropriate proofreading is required.
2. File format
1) Submissions should be uploaded as Microsoft Word files with separate figure files.
2) Manuscripts should be double spaced on A4 paper (210 × 297 mm) with 30 mm margins at the top, bottom and left.
3) All manuscript pages are to be numbered consecutively, beginning with the abstract as page 1. Neither the authors’ names nor their affiliations should appear in the manuscript.
3. Components
1) Title page: Please state the following, (1) article title; (2) full name and institutional affiliation of each author; (3) running title not exceeding 10 words; (4) name, postal and e-mail addresses, and telephone and facsimile numbers of the author responsible for correspondence; (5) conflict of interest statement; (6) any information concerning the sources of financial support and data availability; (7) the manuscript word count; and ORCID iDs of all authors.
2) Abstract
- (1) Original article: up to 250 words
- Abstracts of original articles should be organized as follows:
- Objectives: State the main aim of the study.
- Methods: Describe how the study was done.
- Results: State the main findings, including important numerical values.
- Conclusion: State the single most important conclusion, highlighting controversial or unexpected observations.
- (2) Review article: up to 250 words
- No structure is specified.
- (3) Case reports: up to 150 words
- No structure is specified.
3) Key words: Up to five keywords should be listed in alphabetical order at the bottom of the abstract. For the selection of keywords, we recommend using Medical Subject Headings (MeSH, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/MBrowser.html) in Index Medicus.
4) Main text
5) Acknowledgements: Name people who contributed substantially but who are not eligible as authors.
6) References
- (1) All references should be written in English.
- (2) Start on a separate page, numbering the references consecutively in the order in which they appear in the text. All references should be cited in the text.
- (3) Journal names should be officially abbreviated according to Index Medicus.
- (4) All authors are to be listed when six or fewer; when there are seven or more, the first six should be given, followed by ‘et al.’
- (5) The maximum number of reference(s) is 40 for original articles, 15 for case reports, and 50 for review articles.
- (6) Examples of reference style
- a. Journal article
- · Cho CM, Cheong HI, Lee JW. Severe acute kidney injury with familial renal hypouricemia confirmed by genotyping of SLC22A12. Ewha Med J. 2020;43(2):35-38. https://doi.org/10.12771/emj.2020.43.2.35
- · Bernsdorf M, Balslev E, Lykkesfeldt AE, Kroman N, Harder E, von der Maase H, et al. Value of postoperative reassessment of estrogen receptor α expression following neoadjuvant chemotherapy with or without gefitinib for estrogen receptor negative breast cancer. Breast Cancer Res Treat 2011;128(1):165-170. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10549-011-1535-x
- b. Book
- · Gordon PH, Nivatvongs S. Principles and practice of surgery for the colon, rectum and anus. 2nd ed. St Louis: Quality Medical Publishers; 1992.
- c. Chapter in a book
- · Dozois RR. Disorders of the anal canal. In: Sabiston DC, Lyerly HK, editors. Textbook of surgery: the biological basis of modern surgical practice. 15th ed. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders; 1997. p.1032-1044.
- d. Online publication
- · Suzuki S, Kajiyama H, Shibata K, Ino K, Nawa A, Sakakibara K, et al. Is there any association between retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy and survival benefit in ovarian clear cell carcinoma patients? Ann Oncol 2008 Mar 19 [Epub]. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/
- e. Online source
- · American Cancer Society. Cancer reference information [Internet]. Atlanta (GA): American Cancer Society; c2009 [cited 2010 Aug 10]. Available from: http://www.cancer.org/docroot/CRI/CRI_0.asp
- · National Cancer Information Center. Cancer incidence [Internet]. Goyang (KR): National Cancer Information Center; c2009 [cited 2010 Aug 10]. Available from: http://www.cancer.go.kr/cms/statics
- a. Journal article
7) Tables
- (1) Tables are to be numbered in the order in which they are cited in the text.
- (2) A table title should concisely describe the content of the table so that a reader can understand the table without referring to the text.
- (3) Each table must be simple and typed on a separate page with the heading above.
- (4) Explanatory matter is placed in footnotes below the tabular matter and not included in the heading. All non-standard abbreviations are explained in the footnotes. For instance: Rad, radiation; Chemo, chemotherapy; NS, not significant. *P<0.001.
- (5) Footnotes should be indicated by *, †, ‡, §, ∥, ¶, **.
- (6) Statistical measures (such as SD and SEM) should be identified.
- (7) Vertical rules and horizontal rules between entries should be omitted.
8) Figures
- (1) Figures include graphs, line drawings, photographs and video clips. Line drawings are acceptable as clear black on white graphics and must be high quality.
- (2) Each figure should be supplied as a single file in ppt, jpg, gif or pdf format and have a resolution of over 300 dots per inch. Supply artwork at the intended size for printing.
- (3) Figures must be cited in the text and numbered in order or referred to as ‘Fig.’ followed by Arabic numbers. In the case of multiple images bearing the same number, use English letters after the numbers to indicate the correct order (e.g., Fig. 1A, Fig. 1B).
- (4) The legends to illustrations should be placed at the end of the manuscript. Provide the figure title in a phrase and a description of the figure in the form of complete sentences in present tense. The legends should be a brief but comprehensive explanation of all information in the figures. The legends to light microscopic photographs should include the name of the stain and magnification.
- (5) Video clips can be submitted for placement on the journal website. All videos are subject to peer review. Video files must be compressed to the smallest possible size that allows for high resolution and quality presentation. The size of each clip should not exceed 30 MB and it should be in high-quality MPEG2, AVI, WMV or asf format, and no longer than 5 minutes in duration.
- (6) All types of figures may be reduced, enlarged, or trimmed for publication by the editor.
- (7) If an illustration has been published previously, written permission from the original source should be obtained and copies of permission letters should be submitted.
Abbreviations
Abbreviations should not be use in the title. Expansion of all abbreviations is required at first mention in the text, followed by the abbreviation in parentheses. Use of abbreviations should be kept to a minimum.
Units of Measurement
Measurements of length, height, weight, and volume should be reported in metric units (meter, kilogram, liter, or their decimal multiples). Temperature should be in degrees Celsius.
Reporting Sex/Gender
The term sex should be used when reporting biological factors and gender should be used when reporting gender identity or psychosocial/ cultural factors. If only one sex is reported, or included in the study, the reason the other sex is not reported or included should be explained in the methods section, except for studies of diseases/disorders that only affect males (e.g., prostate disease) or females (e.g., ovarian disease). The sex distribution of study participants or samples should be reported in the results section, including for studies of human, tissues, cells, or animals. Study results should be disaggregated and all outcome data reported by sex.
How to Submit a Manuscript
Manuscripts are submitted online to Ewha Med J via an online submission system (http://www.emj.or.kr). Submissions must be accompanied by a completed Author’s Checklist and Author Consent Form. The Author Consent Form requires the individual signatures of all authors.
Contact the Editorial office if you have a problem submitting a manuscript.
- Tel: 82-2-2650-5851
- Fax: 82-2-2650-5850
- E-mail: E600091@ewha.ac.kr
Things to Know after Submission
1. Peer review policy and process
All manuscripts are previewed for format. If the structure of the manuscript does not comply with the instructions, then the manuscript will not be accepted. A manuscript that satisfies the basic structural format is assigned to two reviewers for peer review; to minimize bias, the reviewers are blinded to the authors’ identities. If there is a marked discrepancy in the decisions of the two reviewers or between the opinions of the author and the reviewer(s), the editor may send the manuscript to a third reviewer for additional comments and a recommended decision. Decisions about a manuscript should be based only on its importance, originality, clarity, and relevance to the journal’s scope and content.
2. Submission of a revised manuscript
When you prepare a revised version of your manuscript, it is essential that you carefully follow the instructions in the Editor’s letter regarding the preparation of a revised manuscript, particularly, the preparation of an annotated copy. Failure to do so will delay review of the revised manuscript and may result in return of the manuscript without review, for proper preparation. If a revision is not received within 6 months after the request, your file may be closed.
3. Withdrawing manuscripts after submission
Corresponding authors who wish to withdraw a manuscript after it has been submitted must provide a letter signed by themselves indicating that the corresponding author represents the wishes of all authors in withdrawing the manuscript. Manuscripts will not be withdrawn from consideration once they have been submitted, until the journal office receives the request in writing. Manuscripts cannot be withdrawn after final acceptance by the journal, except for reasons of scientific error or misconduct.