Content types

The following article types can be submitted to Communications Medicine:

Article
Registered Report
Review
Perspective
Comment
Matters Arising

Other types of content:
Editorial
Research Highlight
Q&A
Viewpoint
Consensus Statement
 

Article

Communications Medicine publishes original research as Articles, which may range in length from short communications through to more in-depth studies. As a guide, we recommend that Articles be limited to ~5,000 words. Regardless of the length, an Article is a novel and important research study of high quality and of interest to that specific research community.

For a detailed breakdown of our formatting requirements for Articles, and for clarity on recommended structure and content, please see our style and formatting guide. A style and formatting checklist is also available as a resource. Manuscripts submitted to Communications Medicine do not need to adhere to our formatting requirements at the point of initial submission; formatting requirements only apply at the time of acceptance.

Articles are peer-reviewed and include received/accepted dates. Authors must provide a competing interests and author contributions statement before publication.
 

Registered Report

A Registered Report is another original research article that undergoes a two-stage peer review process. In the first stage, the methods and proposed analyses are peer reviewed, accepted-in-principle, and pre-registered for publication prior to data collection. In the second stage, once the study is complete, the authors finalise the article to include results and discussion, and the complete manuscript is peer-reviewed again to ensure no unjustified deviation from the pre-registered protocol. This format is designed to minimize publication bias and research bias in hypothesis-driven research, while also allowing the flexibility to conduct exploratory (unregistered) analyses and report serendipitous findings.

Detailed guidelines for authors can be found here. Registered Reports include received/accepted dates. Authors must provide a competing interests and author contributions statement before publication.
 

Review

A Review article summarizes recent advances within a given discipline. Although Reviews should be recognized as scholarly by specialists in the field, they should be written with a view to informing non-specialist readers. Thus, Reviews should be presented using simple prose, avoiding excessive jargon and technical detail.

Review is a flexible article format, but typically occupies no more than 10 pages. A review should begin with a title of up to 15 words and a preface of less than 100 words written for a general audience. As a guide, we recommend that the main text be limited to ~6,000 words. Reviews can include up to 8 display items (figures, tables and/or boxes). Footnotes are not used. Review articles should typically have no more than three authors. For a detailed breakdown of our formatting requirements for Review articles, please see our style and formatting checklist.

The scope of a Review should be broad enough that it is not dominated by the work of a single laboratory, and particularly not by the authors' own work. Unpublished primary research data are not permitted in Reviews.

Authors must provide a competing interests statement before publication. Reviews include received/accepted dates. Reviews are always peer reviewed to ensure factual accuracy, appropriate citations and scholarly balance, and they are edited in consultation with the editorial team.
 

Perspective

A Perspective is intended to provide a forum for authors to discuss models and ideas from a personal viewpoint. They are more forward looking and/or speculative than Review articles and may take a narrower field of view. They may be opinionated but should remain balanced and are intended to stimulate discussion and new experimental approaches.

Perspectives follow the same formatting guidelines and policies as Reviews. For a detailed breakdown of our formatting requirements for Perspective articles, please see our style and formatting checklist. Perspectives are peer-reviewed and include received/accepted dates. Authors must provide a competing interests and author contributions statement before publication.
 

Comment

Comment is a very flexible format. Comments may be on policy, science and society or purely scientific issues. The main criteria are that they should be of immediate interest to the readership of the journal and should be written in an accessible, non-technical style. Their length is typically 1-4 pages, up to 1,500 words, although some may be longer. Comments do not normally contain primary research data, although they may present 'sociological' data (funding trends, demographics, bibliographic data, etc). For a detailed breakdown of our formatting requirements for Comment articles, please see our style and formatting checklist.

Comment authors must provide a competing interests statement before publication. Comments may be peer reviewed at the editors' discretion.
 

Matters Arising

Important scientific comments and clarifications on peer-reviewed articles published in Communications Medicine may be submitted as Matters Arising. The guidelines for Matters Arising are outlined here.
 

Editorials

Editorials are written by internal editors, editorial board members or guest editors.  They focus on topics that the editorial team feel are of particular current interest to their readership.
 

Research Highlights

Research Highlights are short articles, usually written by internal editors or editorial board members, to showcase one or more exciting research articles and to place the findings in the context of current literature.   Research Highlights are usually checked for technical accuracy by the authors of the highlighted article.  We do not publish unsolicited Research Highlights.
 

Q&A

Q&As are interviews with one or more individuals on topics that will be of interest to the wider readership of the journal.  The vast majority of Q&A articles are commissioned, but proposals can be made to the editorial team.
 

Viewpoints

Viewpoints provide a forum for several researchers to express their opinion, or discuss in Q&A format, issues associated with a specific topic of interest.  Viewpoints are not usually peer reviewed. The vast majority of Viewpoints are commissioned but proposals can be made to the editorial team.
 

Consensus Statements

Consensus Statement articles are comprehensive analyses - and their agreed outcomes - by a panel of experts on a scientific or medical issue. They are externally peer reviewed and edited in-house.