Submissions

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Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
  • The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  • The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
  • Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
  • The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.
  • The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.

Author Guidelines

Manuscript  Submission Information:

Manuscripts should be submitted online through Journal of Siddha web portal  or through official e-mail journalofsiddha@gmail.com.  Please  write "Special Issue" before the title. Submission should be accompanied by a cover letter with reference to the concerned special issue theme. Manuscripts can be submitted until the  deadline. All papers will be reviewed by members of the editorial board in order to accelerate the publication of papers. Accepted papers will be published in the journal as  soon  as  accepted.

Submitted manuscripts should not have been published previously,  nor  be  under  consideration for publication elsewhere (except conference proceedings papers). Please visit NIS website for the Instructions for authors and other relevant information for submission of  the manuscripts for the Special issue of Journal of Siddha. Submitted papers should be well formatted and use good English.

Submission due date: July 31, 2020

Article-processing charges: No publication fee for this special issue.

Review Articles

These articles should contain a covering letter, title page, summary (need not be structured) and
key words. They should be written under appropriate sub-headings. The authors are encouraged to
use flowcharts, boxes, cartoons, tables and figures for better presentation.

Original Research Articles

These may either be a full length research article or a short communication. These papers should
be arranged into the following sections:
1. Covering letter
2. Title page
3. Abstract and key words
4. Introduction
5. Materials and Methods
6. Results
7. Discussion
8. Acknowledgment
9. References
10. Tables
11. Figures

1. Covering Letter
In addition to the general details (name, address, contact details including mobile number and
email address of the corresponding author), it should mention in brief in what theme the article is
submitted
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2. Title page
It should be paginated as page 1 of the paper. It should include the title (No more than 150
character including space, 16 pt Times New Roman, bold, centre justified) authors’ names and
affiliations (8 pt Times New Roman, centre justified), address for correspondence including e-mail
address (8 pt Times New Roman, left justified).
3. Abstract and key words
Abstract:
It must start on a new page carrying the following information: (a) Title (without authors’ names
or affiliations), (b) Abstract, (c) Key words. It should not exceed 250 words excluding the title and
the key words. The abstract must be concise, clear and informative rather than indicative.
The abstract must be in a structured form (OBJECTIVES, METHODS, RESULTS, and
CONCLUSIONS) and explain briefly what was intended, done, observed, and concluded. The
conclusions and recommendations not found in the text of the article should not be given in the
abstract.
Key words: Provide 3-5 keywords which will help the readers or indexing agencies in crossindexing the study.
4. Introduction
It should start on a new page. Essentially this section must introduce the subject and briefly say
how the idea for research originated. Give a concise background of the study. Do not review
literature extensively but provide the most recent work that has a direct bearing on the subject.
Justification for research aims and objectives must be clearly mentioned without any ambiguity.
The purpose of the study should be stated at the end.
5. Materials and Methods
This section should deal with the materials used and the methodology (how the work was carried
out). The procedure adopted should be described in sufficient details to allow the experiment to be
interpreted and repeated by the readers, if desired. The number of subjects, the number of groups,
the study design, sources of drugs with dosage regimen or instruments used, statistical methods
and ethical aspects must be mentioned under the section. The data collection procedure must be
described. If a procedure is a commonly used, giving a previously published reference would
suffice. The nomenclature, the source of material and equipment used, with details of the
manufacturer in parentheses, should be clearly mentioned. Drugs and chemicals should be
precisely identified using their non-proprietary names or generic names. The doses of drugs should
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be given as unit weight per kilogram body weight e.g., mg/kg. The routes of administration may be
abbreviated. Statistical Methods: The variation of data should be expressed in terms of the
standard error of mean (SEM) or the standard deviation (SD), along with the number of
observations (n). The details of statistical tests used and the level of significance should be stated.
If more than one test is used it is important to indicate which groups and parameters have been
subjected to which test.
6. Results
The results should be stated concisely without comments. They should be presented in logical
sequence in the text with appropriate reference to tables and/or figures. The data given in tables or
figures should not be repeated in the text. The same data should not be presented in both tabular
and graphic forms. Simple data may be given in the text itself instead of figures or tables. Avoid
discussions and conclusions in the results section.
7. Discussion and Conclusion
This section should deal with the interpretation, rather than recapitulation of results. It is important
to discuss the new and significant observations in the light of previous work. Discuss also the
weaknesses or pitfalls in the study. New hypotheses or recommendations can be put forth.
Avoid unqualified statements and conclusions not completely supported by the data. Repetition of
information given under Introduction and Results should be avoided. Conclusions must be drawn
considering the strengths and weaknesses of the study. They must be conveyed in the last
paragraph under Discussion. Make sure conclusions drawn should tally with the objectives stated
under Introduction.
8. Acknowledgements
These should be typed on a new page. Acknowledge only those who have contributed to the
scientific content or provided technical support. Sources of financial support may be mentioned.
9. References
It should begin on a new page. The number of references should normally be restricted to a
maximum of 25 for a full paper. Majority of them should preferably be of articles published in the
last 5 years. Papers which have been submitted and accepted but not yet published may be
included in the list of references with the name of the journal and indicated as “In press”. A
photocopy of the acceptance letter should be submitted with the manuscript.
References are to be cited in the text by super scribed number and should be in the order in
which they appear. References cited only in tables or in legends to figures should be numbered in
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accordance with a sequence established by the first identification in the text of the particular table
or illustration. The references must be verified by the author(s) against the original documents.
The list of references should be typed double spaced in the Vancouver style. Examples are given
in Annexure II.
10. Check list for Tables
 Serially numbered in Arabic numerals?
 Short self explanatory heading given?
 Columns have headings?
 Units of data given?
 ‘n’ mentioned?
 Mean ± SD or Mean ± SEM given?
 Statistical significance of groups indicated by asterisks or other markers?
 P values given?
 Rows and columns properly aligned?
 Appropriate position in the text indicated?
11. Figures
Each figure must be numbered and a short descriptive caption must be provided. A computer
drawn figure with good contrast is acceptable.
Check list for Figures
 Serially numbered?
 Self explanatory caption/legend should be given?
 X and Y axes graduated?
 X and Y axes titled (legend)?
 Units mentioned (if necessary)?
 Different symbols/markers for different groups given?
 SD or SEM represented (graphically)?
 Statistical significance indicated?
 Approximate position in the text marked?

Short communications

While other things remain the same as described above, these papers should be considerably small
in contents.

Clinical trials

It should include
* Title and unstructured abstract.
* Instruction- should cover scientific background and rationale of the study
* Methods:
1. Participants- Eligibility criteria for participants and the settings and locations where the
data were collected.
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2. Interventions- Precise details of the interventions intended for each group and how and
when they were actually administered.
3. Objectives- Specific objectives and hypotheses.
4. Outcomes- Clearly defined primary and secondary outcome measures and, when
applicable, any methods used to enhance the quality of measurements (e.g., multiple
observations, training of assessors).
5. Sample size-How sample size was determined and, when applicable, explanation of
any interim analyses and stopping rules.
6. Randomization, sequence generation- Method used to generate the random allocation
sequence, including details of any restriction (e.g., blocking, stratification).

Case Reports

Interesting clinical cases (with pharmacologic significance) may be considered for publication.
Those with photographs stand a better chance. The case reports should have an unstructured
abstract, introduction, case history and
Protection of patient right to privacy
Identifying information should not be published in written descriptions, photographs, sonograms,
CT scans, etc., and pedigrees unless the information is essential for scientific purposes and the
patient (or parent or guardian, wherever applicable) gives informed consent for publication.
Authors should remove patients' names from figures unless they have obtained informed consent
from the patients.
1. Authors, neither the journals nor the publisher, need to obtain the patient consent form before
the publication and have the form properly archived. The consent forms are not to be uploaded
with the cover letter or sent through email to editorial or publisher offices.
2. If the manuscript contains patient images that preclude anonymity, or a description that has
obvious indication to the identity of the patient, a statement about obtaining informed patient
consent should be indicated in the manuscript.

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