Writing Rules

WRITING RULES

YOBU Journal of Health Sciences is an electronic journal. Original research articles, case reports, letters to the editor and review articles sent to the journal as electronic articles are accepted. You can send your articles prepared in accordance with the spelling rules stated below to sbfdergi@bozok.edu.tr for evaluation.

The articles should be prepared in accordance with the "Requirements for Articles Submitted to Biomedical Journals" announced by the International Medical Journal Editors Committee (http://www.icmje.org/).

Forms to be used:

1. Sample Title Page

2. Copyright and Author Consent Form

General Rules to be Considered in Articles Submitted to the Journal for Publishing

Articles should be written on a computer, in Microsoft Word software, in Times New Roman font, 12 pt and 2 line spacing.

The entire article should be justified, title and paragraph entries should be left justified.

A period must be used when separating decimal numbers.

No spaces should be left between the percent (%) sign and numbers. Percent sign should be written before the number in Turkish articles and after the number in English articles.

Abbreviations should not be used in the title or summary section. Abbreviations should be made where the relevant words are first used in the text.

Page numbers should be added to all pages and the page number should be placed on the bottom right of the page.

The title of the articles should be written in 12 pt, capital letters and bold characters.

All section titles should be written in 12-point, bold and normal font, and only the first letters of the subtitles should be capital.

Articles are double-blinded. For this reason, the articles are written in 4 separate files: a) Title page, b) Blinded article (name, address and other information about the authors are not written), c) Ethics Committee Approval Document (for necessary studies) and d) Publication Rights Transfer Form must be installed on the system. File names should be created as "Title Page", "Blinded Article" and "Ethics Committee Approval Document", "Publication Rights Transfer Form".

Writing Sections

Title Page

English and Turkish titles of the article should be specified on the title page.

The title of the article should be short, abstract and relevant to the main text.

On the title page, the "short title" words that introduce the article to the reader should be given in capital letters.

Names and surnames, academic titles, ORCID numbers, e-mail addresses and institutions of all authors should be specified in the order in the article. Corresponding author's name and surname, academic title, institution, e-mail address, fixed and mobile phone must be written.

Information should be written left justified, with double space between the title, author names and institutions.

Funding information supporting the study, authors' contribution to the study and acknowledgment letter should be included on the title page.

It should be stated whether there is a conflict of interest between the authors.

Turkish and English Abstract Pages

The abstract should be written in Turkish and English and should not exceed 300 words. It should be in Times New Roman font with 1 line spacing and 9 points in size. In the summary part of original studies; introduction, purpose, method, findings, result and keywords should be included. Summary in case reports; It should include introduction, case report and discussion subtitles. For the review, Turkish and English abstracts containing 200-250 words, without any sections, should be prepared.

Keywords

Key words should be specified in Turkish and English abstracts, preferably 3-5 keywords should be used. Turkish keywords in the summary Turkey Science Terms (TBT) in accordance with what (http://www.bilimterimleri.co I) should be given. Key words in the English abstract should be specified in accordance with "Medical Subject Headings (MESH)" (http://www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/MBrowser.html).

Main Text

The research article should be formatted in accordance with the standard scientific format (Abstract, Introduction, Method, Findings, Discussion, Limitations, Conclusion and Suggestions).

In the introduction part, the explanation of the problem addressed by the article and the reasons for the necessity of the research should be included. At the end of the introduction, the purpose, objectives or hypotheses of the study should be clearly stated.

The method section should be detailed, explaining the methods and protocols used, allowing the reader to have a clear idea of ​​how the study was conducted. It should be stated that the type of study, population and sample (sampling method), data collection (data collection tools, data collection method, applications, if any), evaluation of the data and ethics committee approval date-approval code and informed consent from the participants.

Findings in this section, the results of the study should be presented with graphics and tables without comments, and the statistical methods used should be specified. Each table and data should be presented in an orderly order, without using references and citations.

Discussion is the section where the findings are interpreted. This section should be linked to the results of similar studies by linking with the literature, the results should be interpreted comprehensively and the information obtained should be synthesized.

In the limitations section; Money, time, transportation, difficulties encountered in collecting or reporting data should be stated.

Conclusions and recommendations should be brief and contain the most important findings described in the article. In line with the results, suggestions for further research should be included.

It should be stated in the Conflict of Interest section that there is no conflict of interest between the authors.

If there is a thank you, it should be stated in this section.

References should be written in accordance with the journal's writing rules.

Article Type

The type of articles is based on PubMed central definitions. For more information, please see: http://dtd.nlm.nih.gov/publishing/tag-library/3.0/n-w2d0.html

Original research

It includes prospective or retrospective, experimental and clinical studies in health sciences. The article should contain a maximum of 5000 words, excluding abstract and references, and 5-6 figures or tables should be included.

Review

Prepared directly or by invited author / s in the field of health sciences. Authors who have publications on the subject are preferred for the invitation. The text should contain summary, introduction, subject-specific titles, conclusion and references. Systematic reviews should be in accordance with the PRISMA checklist. Review articles; It should not exceed 5000 words and 4 tables, excluding tables, figures and references, and contain a maximum of 60 references.

Letter to the Editor

YOBU Faculty of Health Sciences should include discussion, observation, opinion, correction and comments on journal issues. The maximum length should be 500 words and a maximum of 5 references should be used. If responding to a particular article, the letter should be sent within 6 weeks of the article's publication.

Case Report

Case reports should consist of summary, introduction, case report, discussion and conclusion sections, and should contain a maximum of 2 tables or figures and 20 references.

Tables

Table number and title should be written above the table. A table should be given in the order specified in the text, the table title should be clear and informative enough. When referring to a table in the text, it should be written in parentheses (Example: Table 3). All abbreviations in the table should be explained below the table.

With Shapes and Graphics

Each shape sent must have a minimum resolution of 300DPI. Figure and graphic explanations should be given in informative and detailed. Figure number and title should be written below the figure. While referring to a figure in the text of the article, the number of the figure should be given in parentheses (For example: "Figure 3"). If the figure is quoted from anywhere, the source should be indicated.

References

References should be written in Vancouver style.

https://library.westernsydney.edu.au/main/sites/default/files/cite_Vancouver.pdf

The following rules should be observed in the source writing.

Citing references in the text

References in the text should be numbered according to the order of use and the references should be presented in this order. The reference number should be given in the relevant place in parentheses. If more than one resource is used, a comma should be used between the resources. If there are three or more consecutive references, it should be shown by putting "-" between the starting number and the last digit (Example: 1,2,3,4, instead of 1-4). Where the name of the author is used in the text, the reference number should be given in parentheses after the author's surname (Example: Aydın (18)). If there is more than one author, the first author's surname et al. (Example: Aydın et al. (18)…).

Citing at the end of the text

At the end of the text, references should be written on a separate page with double spacing. Journal names should be abbreviated according to the Index Medicus / Medline / PubMed list. Journal names can be accessed at http://www.nlm.nih.gov/tsd/serials/lji.html. If the name of the journal is not included in this list, it must be written in full. DOI numbers, if any, must be added.

The following examples can be examined for reference and writing at the end of the text;

Article

- In articles up to six authors, the names of all authors should be written, if 7 or more authors are followed by the 6th author, "et al." In Turkish sources, "et al." In foreign sources. should be shortened as.

Articles with six or fewer authors

Akcan E, Polat S. Comparative effect of the smells of amniotic fluid, breast milk, and lavender on newborns' pain during heel lance. Breastfeeding Medicine 2016; 11 (6): 309-314.

Articles by seven or more authors

Nouri K, Huber D, Walch K, Promberger R, Buerkle B, Ott J et al. Fertility awareness among medical and non-medical students: a case-control study. Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2014; 12 (1): 94.

Articles where the author is an institution

Turkish Nurses Association. Future strategies for nursing. Clinical Forum 1992; 105: 23-5.

Electronic Journals

Fenton TR, Kim JH. A systematic review and meta-analysis to revise the Fenton growth chart for preterm infants. BMC Pediatr. 2013; 13 (59): 1-13.

Book

Andreasen NC. Brave new brain: conquering mental illness in the era of the genome. Oxford (GB): Oxford University Press; 2001.

Book chapter

Küçükoğlu S, Aras Doğan Ş. Importance of child health. In: Balcı Akpınar R, Küçükoğlu S, editor. Child Health and First Aid. 1st Edition. Ankara, Nobel Publications, 2019: 3-18.

Congress / Symposium papers

Çimke S, Yıldırım D, Polat S. Violation of children's rights in social media: Sharenting. 1. International Health Science and Life Congress; 2 to 5 May 2018, Burdur, Turkey.

Theses

Çimke S, The effect of hand massage on pain, emotional symptoms and physiological parameters after abdominal surgery in children. Erciyes University Institute of Health Sciences, Department of Child Health and Disease Nursing Doctorate Thesis. 2019

Author Checklist

Before sending your manuscript to the journal, make sure that it covers the following basic elements.

Control List

The title page was prepared in 2 different ways, one containing the authors' credentials, the other one not,

Articles uploaded to the journal should be scanned in the plagiarism program.
Plagiarism must be below 20%, excluding references.


The summary has been prepared as a maximum of 300 words including keywords,

The article contains up to 5 Keywords for indexing,

The article is in 2 lines and 12 point Times New Roman font,

Copyright release obtained for all copyrighted material.