2006
DOI: 10.1080/09540120500294354
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Publishing HIV/AIDS behavioural science reports: An author's guide

Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to report on characteristics of journals that publish manuscripts in the HIV/AIDS behavioural science realm, with the goal of providing assistance to authors seeking to disseminate their work in the most appropriate outlet. Fifty journals who publish behavioural research on HIV/AIDS in English were identified through library and electronic searches. Although ten of the journals focused specifically on HIV/AIDS, the majority of journals are in related fields, including health psycho… Show more

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“…However, the peer review process and the claim of quality has its’ critics, particularly with the advent of a plethora of open access journals and availability of reports and other information online [78]. Peer-reviewed literature about women and HIV in PNG is a useful source of evidence.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the peer review process and the claim of quality has its’ critics, particularly with the advent of a plethora of open access journals and availability of reports and other information online [78]. Peer-reviewed literature about women and HIV in PNG is a useful source of evidence.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies that leverage existing routine or program data, natural experiments, and simulations can accelerate this process and may account for why the overall time from funding to publication when considered in 1 step is much shorter than the combination of each of the steps for which data are available. 35,36 Although time from manuscript submission to publication by the publishing journal averaged about 6 months—a period slightly shorter than what has been previously reported from HIV behavioral studies 37 —it should be noted that part of the lag between study end and publication date may be that manuscript submissions, review periods, and rejections by one or more journals before the ultimate journal of publication are not accounted for in this subcomponent analysis. Given that just 36% of the data production time was used for study enrollment/follow-up, reforming the scientific machinery to get studies up and running faster and disseminated more quickly is where substantive gains in accelerated research production could likely be seen.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%