Guidelines for Editors
The person in charge of overseeing an academic journal's manuscript publication procedure is called a
journal editor. Editors decide which article should be published and which should be rejected. They
manage the review process and make sure that the publications add to the standard of quality of the
journal.
Since we assign the manuscripts based on the editors' areas of competence and interest, we greatly
rely
on their judgement regarding each paper or manuscript.
Editors are accountable for everything that is published in the journals. They should take care of
the
following:
- An effort should be made to satisfy writers' and readers' requirements.
- It should be ensured that the articles published are of the highest possible quality.
- Attempts to make constant improvements to the journals should be ensured.
- The work’s integrity should be preserved.
- The right to free speech should be maintained.
- The compromise of intellectual standards due to corporate needs should be prevented.
- It should be made certain that the authors have shared the information regarding the donor who
has
provided
funding for the study and the role he/she plays in the research, with the readers.
- They should be willing to release retractions, explanations, and corrections, if and when
required.
- It should be made certain that the procedure for the peer review process has been followed.
- The decision of whether to accept or reject an article for publication should be taken only on
the
basis of
the relevance of the study to the journal's mandate, its significance, originality, and clarity.
- Articles to be published should be chosen based on merit and suitability instead of any personal
benefit/interest of the owner/publisher of the journals, or of authors.
- It should be verified that the journal has a clearly stated process in place for authors to
challenge
editorial decisions.
- It should be made sure that the journal publishes instructions for authors outlining all
expectations. This
guideline should be updated on a regular basis.
- Acceptance decisions and other prior Editor's decisions should not be reverted unless grave
issues
are found
with the submission.
- Reviewer guidelines should be provided outlining all expectations. These guidelines need to be
updated
frequently and to make reference to or provide a link to the Committee on Publication Ethics’
(COPE)
best
practices.
- Procedures should be established to make sure that the anonymity of reviewers is maintained.
- Procedures should be established to guarantee that the content submitted to the journal is kept
confidential
while it is being reviewed.
- Complaints should be dealt with by following the process outlined in the COPE flowchart.
- It should be ensured that strong and convincing critiques of articles published in the journals
are
published unless editors provide strong justifications for not doing so. Authors should be
provided
with a
platform to share their responses, if their work has been questioned.
- Studies with negative findings should be included as well.
- It should be verified that the research published in the journals complies with globally
recognised
ethical
standards. The Editors should ask for confirmation that every study has been authorised by the
relevant
authority (such as the institutional review board or the research ethics committee). They should
understand,
though, that this approval does not imply that the research is ethical.
- Privacy of personal data (such as that acquired via a patient-doctor relationship) should be
reserved. As a
result, getting patients' or participants’ written informed consent is nearly always required
for
using
patient photos and case reports. If the report is significant for public health (or in some
other
way),
obtaining consent would be exceptionally difficult, and a reasonable person would be unlikely to
object to
publishing, it might be permissible to publish without explicit consent (all three requirements
must
be
met).
- Proper action should be taken if any kind of misconduct is observed. All papers, published and
unpublished,
are subject to this obligation. Papers that raise questions about potential misconduct should
not be
rejected straightaway. The Editors have a moral obligation to investigate any such claims. The
accused
should be contacted first to get their response. The Editors should ask the relevant employers
or
another
suitable body to look into the matter if they are not pleased with the response. They should
exert
every
reasonable effort to guarantee that a thorough investigation is carried out; in the event that
this
isn't
accomplished, they should exert every reasonable effort to find a solution.
- The academic record's integrity should be assured. If a major error, false statement, or
incorrect
report is
discovered to have been published, it needs to be quickly and prominently corrected. Following a
proper
investigation, if an article turns out to be fraudulent, it should be retracted. The retraction
ought to be
easily discernible to both indexing systems and readers.
- The PDFs of any advertisement received for the journals are shared with the Editors for their
approval
regarding the relevance of the advertisement in the journals. The Editors should reject
deceptive
advertisements and be open to publishing criticisms based on the same standards as the rest of
the
journals.
Reprints should be released as they appear in the journals, except in the case of any
correction.
- Procedures should be established for handling conflicts of interest involving their employees,
writers,
editors, and reviewers.