Writing Rules

Works submitted to the journal for evaluation should be submitted in 2 word files. These are the presentation page to the editor and the main article files.

1. On the  ptitle page to the editor; the title of the sent article (in Turkish and English), the name / surname of the author / s, academic title (s), correspondence address, e-mail address, ORCID, telephone numbers (business phones / mobile phones), contact author information and if the article was presented at a congress / symposium place and date must be found. If there is an institution financing the study, it should be written. If there are individuals who contributed to the study, they should be thanked.
2. The main article should not contain author name and address information.
3. Turkish articles should be based on the Turkish Dictionary of the Turkish Language Association.

4. The manuscripts should be written in (A4) size (21x 29.5) paper, with a 2.5 cm gap on each side, Times New Roman, 12 font size and 2 line spacing (including tables). The number of pages should not exceed 30 in research articles and 20 in review articles. No arrangements should be made in the text (including tables) other than those mentioned above. All arrangements are made by the typesetting team.

5. Ethical committee approval must be obtained and documented separately for clinical and experimental animal studies requiring an ethical committee decision. National and international ethical rules must be followed. The text titled Ethical issues at http://uvt.ulakbim.gov.tr/tip/etik.uhtml can be used. Copy of the ethics committee's permission and the right of publication transfer form signed with a wet signature should be sent to the editor by e-mail.

6. The summary should be written in Turkish and English and should not exceed 300 words. Turkish summary; “Purpose, method, findings and conclusion”, English abstract (Abstract); It should consist of "objective, method, results and conclusion" sections. In the summary section, abbreviation should not be used, formula and source should not be shown.

7. "Keywords" should be included at the end of the Turkish abstract. "Keywords" should be included at the end of the English Abstract. At least three keywords must be written and Keywords must be separated by commas (,). English keywords should be given in accordance with “Medical Subject Headings (MESH)” (See www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/MBrowser.html). Turkish key words "Turkey Science Terms (TBT) What should be the appropriate (See. Www.bilimterimleri.co I).

8. Introduction: In this section, the importance of the subject should be emphasized and all information should be supported by showing the source. In this section, the information that can be found within the scope of material, method, findings or discussion should never be included. Once sufficient information has been given, at the end of the section, the purpose of the study should be clearly written

9. Material and Method: In this section, the material and method used in the study should be explained in detail.

10 Results: Findings obtained from the study and statistical evidence of the reliability of these findings should be presented in this section. Findings obtained from the study can be presented with text, tables, graphics and figures. All findings should be presented without comments.

11. Discussion: In this section, findings and conclusions based on the findings should be compared with the source data, the results matching and not conforming to the sources and their causes should be discussed and interpreted. However, while discussing the findings, speculative comments should be avoided and the explanations should have a scientific basis. In this section, the source information given in the introduction should not be used in the same way, unnecessary repetitions should be avoided.

12. Conclusion and Suggestions: The main conclusion reached as a result of the study should be summarized in this section and suggestions should be made accordingly.

13. If requested; Acknowledgments section can be added after the results and suggestions.

14. Tables, graphics and figures should be written on a separate page and should be placed behind the references section. Tables, graphics and figures should be numbered sequentially according to their transition in the text and each should be given a short title. The title of the table should be written on the table, and the headings of the graphics and figures should be written below them (Example: Table 1. Introductory characteristics of women). In the table title, the first letter of the word should start with capital letters and the others should start with lowercase letters. The numbers given in the table should contain a single number after the comma. While the odd numbers are given in the text and tables, it should be comma (20.9) in Turkish articles and dots (20.9) in English articles. Warnings such as “Enter Table 1”, “Enter Graphic 2” should be placed in places where tables, graphics and figures should be in the text.

15. Pictures (Figures) should be drawn professionally, photographed or presented as digital print in photo quality. The letters, numbers, and symbols in the figures should be clear and easily readable even when their size is reduced for publication. Figures should be numbered in the order in which they are specified in the text. If a previously published image will be used, written permission from the copyright holder must be sent to use the image, and the original source must be thanked and shown in the references section.

16. Authors should put explanatory reasons in footnotes, not in the title. All non-standard abbreviations should be explained in footnotes. The letters or the following symbols must be used in the footnotes: *, †, ‡, §, ||, ¶, **, †™, ‡‡

17. The references section of the article should start with a new page. References should be written alphabetically. It should be shown in brackets at the end of the sentence in the text. Individual experiences, lecture notes, papers and unpublished theses cannot be cited as sources. All references cited in the text should be included in the references section. All authors in the articles used in the References section should be stated.

 - Ozkalp, B., Sevgi, F., Ozcan, M., & Ozcan, M. M. (2010). The antibacterial activity of essential oil of oregano (Origanum vulgare L.). J Food Agric Environ, 8 (2), 272-4.

- Ünüsan, N. (2001). Examining the eating problems of preschool children. Children's Forum, 4 (1), 10-2.

- Soydan, S. B., & Samur, A. Ö. (2017). Validity and reliability study of environmental awareness and attitude scale for preschool children. International Electronic Journal of Environmental Education, 7 (1), 78-97.

- Tuncer, S., Sert, Ö. A., Yosunkaya, A., Mutlu, M., Çelik, J., & Ökesli, S. (2003). Patient-controlled femoral nerve analgesia versus patient-controlled intravenous analgesia for postoperative analgesia after trochanteric fracture repair. Acute Pain, 4 (3-4), 105-108.