Key Strategies in Publishing Medical Research

Tuesday October 2, 2012

Elite Research reveals three key strategies for publishing medical research. Elite Research is a global provider of research design and statistical consulting. Elite Research supports academic, corporate, medical/health, and non-profit researchers in designing, collecting, analysing, and reporting efficient and accurate results.

Publishing your research is usually just as difficult as putting together the entire research design and writing the paper originally. However, publication in essential for those in scientific research careers to garner respect from fellow peers and the scientific community as a whole as well as an opportunity to disseminate new information into your field of study. To ensure that your study is valuable to editors, it must have a clear purpose, be relevant to the readership of the journal, contain valid scientific evidence of an original concept, and have a quality manuscript. Since publishers have literally thousands of papers to choose from, failing to meet even one of these standards will likely result in your research being tossed to the side.

Your paper must have a good message that can be stated in one sentence that can be place on the cover of the journal or in the table of contents to accurately communicate to the reader what exactly your study achieves. Also, your message must attract eyes. In other words, your experiment and findings must be new information to the eyes of your scientific community.

Your decision on what journal you wish for your study to be in must be made before you even start the formal writing of your paper. This is because you need to follow the writing style that your desired journal typically favors. Obviously, your study also needs to be able to be categorized within the overarching subject matter of the periodical or journal.

Scientific validity not only means the accurate portrayal of your findings, but also refers to the accuracy and objectivity you displayed when coming to final results of the study. In other words, your conclusions must be easily connected with the data, and not fall victim to subjectivity or other unconscious biases you might hold. Also, it must be obvious to the readers and your peers that the data you obtained from your study is representative of the entire population which it represents.

Your paper must be devoid of any and all errors, ranging from grammatical errors, to inappropriate experiment designs, to fraud and plagiarism. Additionally, editors may reject a study that is redundant of other publications or involves some sort of conflict of interest, such as research on the adverse effects of medications that is funded by the medical company itself.

Contact Elite Research today to get reliable help with all of your statistical, research, and editorial needs! http://eliteresearch.com/ or (800) 806-5661.

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