Health Care Journals | Open Access - Edelweiss | Edelweiss Publications

Reviewers


Conflict of Interest

Reviewers should not accept to review a manuscript if a conflict of interest exists. Examples of typical conflicts of interest are:

  • The reviewer has an ownership interest in a company that stands to benefit from the results reported in the manuscript.
  • The reviewer is currently collaborating with the author or has recently collaborated with the author (i.e. within the past 5 years).
  • The reviewer feels he or she cannot give an impartial and objective review, free from professional or personal bias.

If you have questions regarding a potential conflict of interest, please contact the handling editor, and he/she will decide whether it is appropriate to review the manuscript.

Time

Please consider whether you can complete the review within 10 days. Also, after agreeing to complete a review, if unforeseen circumstances prevent the reviewer from completing within the allotted time, please contact the editor immediately.

Peer Review Process

If you realize that a conflict of interest exists after the review process begins, please notify the handling editor immediately.

Ethical Responsibilities during the Review Process

Confidentiality

The reviewer should maintain confidentiality about the existence and substance of the manuscript. It is inappropriate to share the manuscript or to discuss it in detail with others before publication. There are some exceptions, if approved by the editor. One example is that the reviewer may ask a colleague to collaborate on a review. However, your collaborator on the review should also agree to maintain confidentiality, and the editor should be informed of the participation of this additional person.

Reviewer Conduct

Reviewers must not publicly discuss authors’ work and must not appropriate authors’ ideas before the manuscript is published. Reviewers must not retain the manuscript for their personal use and should destroy copies of manuscripts after submitting their reviews.

Knowledge of the content of confidential manuscripts should not be used for any other purpose unrelated to the reviewing of the manuscript.

Reporting Concerns

The reviewer also has the responsibility of noting any ethical concerns, not limited to but including suspected duplicate publication, fraud, plagiarism, or ethical concerns about the use of animals or humans in the research being reported.

Constructing a Review

1. Grading a manuscript

In this section of the review form, the reviewer ranks the 1) Novelty/Originality, 2) Scientific Importance/Impact, 3) Adequacy of Methods/Experimental Design, 4) Quality of Data/Presentation Results, and 5) Overall Scientific Priority of the manuscript based on the following scale:

  • Grade 1- Accepted.
  • Grade 2- Accepted with minor changes.
  • Grade 3- Accepted after major changes.
  • Grade 4- Rejected
  • N/A = Does not apply to this paper

Manuscripts are likely to be accepted for publication basing on the grades given by reviewers. The reviewer also makes a recommendation for publication. Indicate whether you have any concerns regarding the statistical analysis used or if there are any ethical considerations.

2. In confidential comments to the Editor

Summarize your reasons for your grading and recommendations. Provide specific comments regarding the original aspects of the work and its importance.

3. In comments to the Author

The comments to the author should not include any statements that indicate to the author your judgment as to the acceptability of the paper for publication. All comments should be stated in a constructive and helpful way. The reviewer should discuss the shortcomings and/or strengths of a study.

Include in your critique your judgment of

  • originality and scientific importance
  • adequacy and length of the title
  • adequacy of the abstract
  • introduction, rationale and clarity of hypothesis
  • adequacy of experimental design and methods
  • quality of data and presentation of results, including figures
  • appropriateness of the authors’ interpretation of their data
  • length and appropriateness of the discussion
  • inclusion of recent and appropriate references. If possible, make specific recommendations for revisions.