Down Syndrome Research and Practice
Submissions Requirements
Further policies and guidelines
All submissions to Down Syndrome Research and Practice should meet the
following requirements.
Cover letter
Please include a cover letter explaining why the manuscript is suitable for publication
in Down Syndrome Research and Practice.
Prior publication
All authors are asked to indicate that they have not submitted a similar manuscript
for publication elsewhere. If related work has been submitted elsewhere, then a
copy must be included with the article submitted to Down Syndrome Research and Practice.
Listed authors
All authors must consent to the submission of the manuscript. All authors will be
contacted to confirm their approval. The involvement of any professional medical
writer in publication must be declared (see the
European Medical Writers Association (EMWA) guidelines [PDF] on the role
of medical writers in developing peer-reviewed publications). Please refer to section II.A. of the Uniform Requirements for
Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals: Writing and Editing for Biomedical
Publication for guidance about recognising authorship.
Confirmation of ethics approval
All research involving humans and animals must have been approved by the authors'
institutional review board or equivalent committee, and that board must be named
by the authors. In the case of human participants, informed consent must have been
obtained, and all clinical investigation must have been conducted according to the
principles expressed in the Declaration
of Helsinki. Authors should submit a statement from the ethics committee
or institutional review board indicating approval of the research.
Informed consent to research
We encourage authors to submit a sample of their participant consent form and may
sometimes require a copy. Authors must confirm that informed consent was properly
obtained from participants.
For further information, see sections 20-27 of the
Declaration of Helsinki and
section 8.02 of the APA's Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct.
Patient privacy and informed consent for publication
Please refer to section II.E. of the Uniform
Requirements of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors.
Complete anonymity is difficult to achieve, and informed consent for publication
should be obtained if there is any doubt. When informed consent has been obtained
it should be indicated in the published article.
Competing interests
All authors will be asked to declare whether they have any financial, personal or
professional interests that could be construed to have influenced their paper. Reviewers
are also asked to declare any interests that might interfere with their objective
assessment of a manuscript. Any relevant competing interests of authors must be
available to editors and reviewers during the review process and will be stated
in published articles.
Epidemiological Studies
Reports of epidemiological studies should use the
STROBE initiative as a guide.
Registration of clinical trials
Down Syndrome Research and Practice supports the position of the International
Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) on trial registration. All trials initiated
after 1 July 2005 must be registered prospectively in a publicly accessible registry
(i.e., before patient recruitment has begun), or they will not be considered for
publication. For trials initiated before 1 July 2005, all trials must be registered
before submission. The trial's registration number must be provided at the time
of submission. See the ICMJE's Frequently Asked
Questions [PDF] for further information.
CONSORT reporting guidelines for clinical trials
For reports of clinical trials, authors must submit original protocols as supporting
information to allow editors and reviewers to assess manuscripts fully. Any deviation
from the protocol must be explained. Authors of clinical trials must adhere to the
CONSORT reporting guidelines appropriate
to their trial design. All reports of the results of randomised clinical trials
should include the CONSORT flow
diagram, and authors should complete and submit the checklist contained within the
CONSORT statement.
Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of randomised controlled trials
Reports of meta-analyses of randomized controlled studies should use the
QUOROM statement as a guide, and should include a copy of the
QUOROM checklist [PDF].