CURRENT ISSUE
EDITORIAL CALENDAR
November 2010
Clinical Focus: Cardiovascular Events and Emergency Surgery
Clinical Focus: Cardiovascular Events and Emergency Surgery
- Pre-and postoperative care of GERD
- Renal care
- Sleep disorders
- Heart disease
- Caring for the poststroke patient
- Cardiovascular events and emergency surgery
- Osteoporosis
- Osteomyelitis
- Caring for postoperative patients
- Cv imaging in heart surgery
- Valve surgery
- Perioperative risk
- Sudden cardiac death in the young
- Cardiac/cardiopulmonary arrest
- Post-cardiac arrest syndrome
- CV consequences of aging
- Hydrogen sulfide in CVD
- Arterial stiffness
- Regionalized care for:
- Acute cardiovascular events
- Trauma care
- Post-cardiac arrest syndrome
- Pacemaker therapy of postoperative arrhythmias after pediatric cardiac surgery
- Effect of hospital volume and teaching status on outcomes of acute liver failure
- Caring for women undergoing cardiac ablation
Submission deadline: September 15
Fast-Track deadline: October 05
Fast-Track deadline: October 05
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provided to the author within 72 hours of their receipt by the editorial office. Authors
are asked to submit a revised manuscript within 10-12 days. Accepted manuscripts are
processed within 2-3 weeks, published online within 3 business days of final author
approval, and in print in the next available issue.
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Phone: 610-889-3732
Fax: 1-866-297-3168
j.elduff@hosppract.com
General Information
Phone: 610-889-3730
Fax: 1-866-297-3168
1235 Westlakes Drive
Suite 320
Berwyn, PA 19312
sitelicenses@hosppract.com
Reprints:
reprints@hosppract.com
Subscriptions:
subscriptions@hosppract.com
Supplements:
supplements@hosppract.com
Document Delivery Services
1966-2010:
documentdelivery@hosppract.com
Editorial:
editor-in-chief@hosppract.com editorial@hosppract.com
Website:
support@hosppract.com
Managing Director:
John Elduff
Phone: 610-889-3732
Fax: 1-866-297-3168
j.elduff@hosppract.com
General Information
Phone: 610-889-3730
Fax: 1-866-297-3168
1235 Westlakes Drive
Suite 320
Berwyn, PA 19312
Clinical Features
The Clinical Features section of Hospital Practice features Original Research, Review
Articles, and Case Reports.
Review Articles are comprehensive analyses and meta-analyses of specific topics that are relevant to our readers. Review articles published in Hospital Practice are both solicited and unsolicited. The submitted article should describe current developments in the field of clinical medicine. All review articles should present content that is accessible to readers who are not intimately familiar with the subject being reviewed. As such, all review articles should increase readers' interest and describe important developments. We encourage authors to contact the editorial department to discuss any unsolicited article topics in order to avoid replication of previously published or already submitted articles. A signed author disclosure form is required before any submission can be published.
Original Research articles are formal investigative studies that focus on timely clinical issues. These reports typically include randomized trials, intervention studies, cohort studies, case-control studies, epidemiologic assessments, other observational studies, surveys with high response rates, cost-effectiveness analyses and decision analyses, and studies of screening and diagnostic tests. Each manuscript should clearly state an objective or hypothesis; the design and methods (including the study setting and dates, patients or participants with inclusion and exclusion criteria and/or participation or response rates, or data sources, and how these were selected for the study); the essential features of any interventions; the main outcome measures; the main results of the study; a comment section placing the results in context with the published literature and addressing study limitations; and the conclusions. Data included in research reports should be as current as possible. A signed author disclosure form is required before any submission can be published.
Case Reports should include the etiology, diagnosis, and management of a single case. Case reports should help primary care physicians improve patient care. They should include information on the background of the patient, how the initial diagnosis was reached, discussion of the differential diagnosis, and discussion about treatment and management. Case reports can focus on unique cases, unexpected associations, unusual side effects or adverse medication interaction, unusual disease presentation, management of new diseases, unexpected events during the treatment course, pathogenesis of a disease, or any other substantial findings of educational value. Data regarding suspected adverse drug reactions should provide a description of the event, details regarding the implicated medication (purpose, when initiated), previous adverse drug reactions with similar drugs, effects of dechallenge or rechallenge, and treatment for the reaction. The report should be factual, concise, logically organized, and clearly presented.
We encourage authors to submit relevant figures. Be sure to include any IRB protocol numbers if applicable. A signed author disclosure form is required before any submission can be published. As established in the AMA Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors (10th edition), we also require a signed informed consent statement specifying that the patient appearing in any identifiable images is aware that they will be featured in the submitted case report.
Review Articles are comprehensive analyses and meta-analyses of specific topics that are relevant to our readers. Review articles published in Hospital Practice are both solicited and unsolicited. The submitted article should describe current developments in the field of clinical medicine. All review articles should present content that is accessible to readers who are not intimately familiar with the subject being reviewed. As such, all review articles should increase readers' interest and describe important developments. We encourage authors to contact the editorial department to discuss any unsolicited article topics in order to avoid replication of previously published or already submitted articles. A signed author disclosure form is required before any submission can be published.
Original Research articles are formal investigative studies that focus on timely clinical issues. These reports typically include randomized trials, intervention studies, cohort studies, case-control studies, epidemiologic assessments, other observational studies, surveys with high response rates, cost-effectiveness analyses and decision analyses, and studies of screening and diagnostic tests. Each manuscript should clearly state an objective or hypothesis; the design and methods (including the study setting and dates, patients or participants with inclusion and exclusion criteria and/or participation or response rates, or data sources, and how these were selected for the study); the essential features of any interventions; the main outcome measures; the main results of the study; a comment section placing the results in context with the published literature and addressing study limitations; and the conclusions. Data included in research reports should be as current as possible. A signed author disclosure form is required before any submission can be published.
Case Reports should include the etiology, diagnosis, and management of a single case. Case reports should help primary care physicians improve patient care. They should include information on the background of the patient, how the initial diagnosis was reached, discussion of the differential diagnosis, and discussion about treatment and management. Case reports can focus on unique cases, unexpected associations, unusual side effects or adverse medication interaction, unusual disease presentation, management of new diseases, unexpected events during the treatment course, pathogenesis of a disease, or any other substantial findings of educational value. Data regarding suspected adverse drug reactions should provide a description of the event, details regarding the implicated medication (purpose, when initiated), previous adverse drug reactions with similar drugs, effects of dechallenge or rechallenge, and treatment for the reaction. The report should be factual, concise, logically organized, and clearly presented.
We encourage authors to submit relevant figures. Be sure to include any IRB protocol numbers if applicable. A signed author disclosure form is required before any submission can be published. As established in the AMA Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors (10th edition), we also require a signed informed consent statement specifying that the patient appearing in any identifiable images is aware that they will be featured in the submitted case report.
- Safe Insulin Use in the Hospital Setting
- Incretin-Based Therapies:
Review of the Outpatient Literature with Implications for Use in the Hospital and After Discharge - Acute Ischemic Stroke and Thrombolysis Location:
Comparing Telemedicine and Stroke Center Treatment Outcomes
- Acute Ischemic Stroke and Thrombolysis Location:
Comparing Telemedicine and Stroke Center Treatment Outcomes - New Approaches to Cystic Fibrosis
- Dementia: Causes, Evaluation, and Management
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