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ISI Web of Knowledge Journal Citation Impact Factor
2008: 1.575 5-year: 2.723
Editorial Goal
The editorial goal of the American Journal of Health Promotion is to provide
a forum for exchange among the many disciplines involved in health promotion and
an interface between researchers and practitioners. We also publish a newsletter
called The Art of Health Promotion, which provides practical information to make
programs more effective. The newsletter is published as a section of the
American Journal of Health Promotion.
Definition of Health Promotion
Health Promotion is the art and science of helping people discover
the synergies between their core passions and optimal health, enhancing
their motivation to strive for optimal health, and supporting them in
changing their lifestyle to move toward a state of optimal health.
Optimal health is a dynamic balance of physical, emotional, social,
spiritual, and intellectual health. Lifestyle change can be facilitated
through a combination of learning experiences that enhance awareness,
increase motivation, and build skills and, most important, through the
creation of opportunities that open access to environments that make
positive health practices the easiest choice.
O’Donnell MP.
Definition of health promotion 2.0: embracing passion, enhancing
motivation, recognizing dynamic balance, and creating opportunities. Am
J Health Promot. 2009 Jul-Aug;23(6):iv.
Editorial Scope
- Manuscripts can be full-length manuscripts or brief reports. Full-length
manuscripts take the form of Quantitative Research, Qualitative Research, or
Systematic Literature Reviews. Brief reports take the form of Current Issues
and Trends or Applied Research Briefs. Articles are published in the
following editorial areas:
- Interventions, including emotional health (which includes stress
management), intellectual health (which includes mind-body health), physical
health (which encompasses fitness, medical self-care, nutrition, smoking
control, and weight control), social health, and spiritual health
- Strategies, including awareness programs, behavior change programs, and
supportive environment programs such as culture change, health policy, and
population health
- Applications, including employee assistance programs, health-promoting
community design and programs for
underserved populations
- Research, including issues related to measurement, study design,
analysis and sampling, and important results on financial analysis and
return on investment
Presubmission Inquiry
Authors MUST submit a "Presubmission Inquiry" in the form of a structured
abstract to the Editor, who will determine whether their manuscript fits
the editorial scope of the Journal. Guidelines for preparing and submitting the
structured abstract are provided at http://ajhp.allentrack.net (please note
"www"is NOT used with this address). Structured abstracts should
follow the parameters set out in those guidelines and should also be submitted
to that website. Responses with a determination of appropriateness will normally
be sent within 10 days.
Submission of Manuscripts to American Journal of Health Promotion
If the Editor determines that the manuscript fits the editorial scope of the
Journal, authors will be sent instructions to submit the manuscript to the
allentrack.net website.
Review Process and Criteria for Acceptance
Authors are encouraged to request copies of the Editorial Review Forms
appropriate to their manuscript before preparing and submitting the manuscript.
These are not published in the Journal but can be requested from the editorial
office by e-mail (dprice@allenpress.com).
The initial review process normally takes 3 months. Reviews of subsequent
revisions take about 2 months. Acknowledgment of articles received will be sent
to authors after the editor has decided whether to send the manuscript out for
review.
External reviews of all manuscripts, except Critical Issues and Trends, are
blind and anonymous. Internal reviews of manuscripts by the Editor are not blind
or anonymous. Manuscripts are reviewed by three reviewers who include a subject
matter expert, a practitioner, and a research methodologist, as appropriate.
Reviewers consider the following criteria: relevance and importance to practice
or research, scientific quality, presentation quality, and conformity to format
guidelines.
Manuscripts are reviewed with the understanding that they have not been
previously published and are not under consideration by another publication.1 A
complete report after publication of preliminary findings elsewhere is normally
acceptable. Copies of preliminary reports and duplicative materials published
elsewhere or being considered by other publications should be submitted with the
manuscript and referred to in the cover letter.
Publicity for Articles: Press Releases and Webinars
In an effort to maximize the visibility of published articles, we
send press releases to major media outlets. This sometimes results in
media interviews with the author and coverage in the popular media. We
also offer free bimonthly webinars that feature authors of selected
articles from each issue. These webinars are also posted on our
Web site. Authors will be invited to participate in these webinars
when their article is accepted for publication and asked to prepare a
short Powerpoint presentation to describe their methodology and
findings.
Authorship Requirements
Each author should have participated sufficiently in the work to take public
responsibility for appropriate portions of the content. One or more authors
should take responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole, from
inception to published article. Authorship credit should be based only on (1)
substantial contributions to conception and design, or acquisition of data, or
analysis and interpretation of data; and (2) drafting the article or revising it
critically for important intellectual content; and (3) final approval of the
version to be published. Conditions 1, 2, and 3 must all be met.2 Authors are
required to identify their contributions to the work described in the
manuscript.
If authorship is attributed to a group (either solely or in addition to one
or more individual authors), all members of the group must meet the full
criteria and requirements for authorship as described above. A group must
designate at least one or more individuals as authors or members of a writing
group who meet full authorship criteria and requirements and who will take
responsibility for the group. Other group members who are not authors may be
listed in an Acknowledgment.2
Cover Letter
In a separate document, submit a cover letter that includes the following
information:
-
An explanation of how your paper is innovative,
provocative, timely, and of interest to a broad audience.
-
A list of any papers on related topics by any of
the authors that have been published within the past year or that are in
review or in press.
-
For multi-authored papers, a statement that all
the authors have made substantial contributions to (a) either conception and
design or else analysis and interpretation of data and to (b) drafting the
article or revising it critically for important intellectual content and on
(c) final approval of the version to be published and agree to its
submission.
-
A statement of financial or other relationships
that may lead to a conflict of interest. (Consult Section II.D of "Uniform
Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals."1)
-
A statement that written permission was obtained
from individuals cited in the Acknowledgments section, if appropriate
(attach permission letters to your cover letter).
-
A statement that, if your manuscript includes a
personal communication, you have attached written permission to cite and
confirmation of the accuracy of information from the source of the personal
communication. (attach permission letters to your cover letter)
Format and Style of Manuscript
General Instructions
Manuscripts should be prepared in accordance with the American Medical
Association Manual of Style3
and/or the "Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical
Journals."1 Use the following
guidelines when preparing your manuscript for submission. Refer also to the
additional guidelines specific to each type of manuscript. These are described
in the section titled "Instructions for Specific Types of Manuscripts."
Manuscript Submission Format
To facilitate the blind and anonymous review
process, the submitted manuscript should include 2 separate files: The
manuscript and a separate title page. Submit the title page with the following
information:
*The name(s) of author(s) and other listed
in the acknowledgments should appear elsewhere in the manuscript.
Title
of the article
Outline
Abstract or Synopsis Key Words
Indexing Key Words
Text
SO WHAT? (if required)
References
Tables Figure Legends
Figures (in separate files)
Outline
Prepare an outline of the manuscript, showing all main headings and
subheadings. Show the word counts for the abstract and text (not including the
references, tables, figures, and figure legends) at the bottom of the outline.
Abstract or Synopsis
The maximum number of words depends on the type of manuscript. (See
"Instructions for Specific Types of Manuscripts" below.) Do not cite references in
the abstract.
Key Words
Immediately below the abstract, provide 4 to 6 key words or short phrases.
Whenever possible, use terms from the Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) list of
Index Medicus, which are available online (http://www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/meshhome.html).
The key words and indexing key words, described below, are shown beneath the
abstract of the published article.
Indexing Key Words
The indexing key words are intended to
help readers search editorial indexes of our published manuscripts more
effectively. They must be included along with your manuscript submission. Please
select the appropriate key word(s) for each of the 9 factors below. List these
key words, including the category, at the bottom of your abstract in the order
shown - e.g., "Manuscript format: research; Research purpose: program evaluation," etc.
1. Manuscript format: (editorial/commentary/concept, literature review,
research)
For research articles
2. Research purpose: (instrument development, intervention testing/ program
evaluation,
modeling/relationship testing, descriptive)
3. Study design: (randomized trial, quasi-experimental, non-experimental,
qualitative,
content analysis)
4. Outcome measure: (cognitive, behavioral, biometric, morbidity, mortality,productivity, absenteeism, other financial/economic)
Content focus
5. Setting: (family, workplace, school, clinical/health care, local
community,
state/national)
6. Health focus: (fitness/physical activity, intellectual health, medical self
care, nutrition,
smoking control, social health, spiritual health, stress management, weight
control)
7. Strategy: (education, skill building/behavior change, incentives, policy,
culture change,
built environment)
8. Target population age: (youth, adults, seniors)
9. Target population circumstances (specify all that apply): education/ income
level,
geographic location, and race/ethnicity
Text Format
Create the manuscript in Microsoft Word or save as a .doc file. Use 12-point
Times New Roman font. The manuscript should be double-spaced with 1-inch margins
on all sides. Leave the right-hand margin ragged (unjustified). Number pages in
numerical order. Insert line numbers in the margin
on the left-hand side of each page of the abstract and text. Line numbers are
not required for references, tables, figures, or figure legends.
Ensure that main headings and subheadings correspond directly to headings in
the outline. Report p values as precisely as possible, rather than automatically
rounding them to the 0.05 or 0.01 level.
Ethical Requirements
For experimental investigations of human subjects, state in the Methods
section that an appropriate institutional review board approved the project.3(p.140)
For those investigators who do not have formal ethics review committees, the
principles outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki
should be followed.4 For
investigations of human subjects, state in the Sample part of the Methods
section the manner in which informed consent was obtained from the study
participants.
SO WHAT? (if required)
For Quantitative Research, Qualitative Research, and Systematic
Literature Review manuscripts, please prepare a 100-150 word summary of
the contribution of the article to the literature. Use the
headings below to organize your comments. Consider the magnitude
and methodological quality of the existing literature and the
methodological quality of your research in composing your comments.
What is already known on this topic?
Briefly summarize what we know on this topic from the existing peer
reviewed literature. Consider the magnitude and methodological
quality of the existing literature in composing this summary.
What does this article add?
Briefly summarize what this article adds to the literature.
Please consider quality of the research methodology of this work and
be conservative in composing this summary.
What are the implications for health promotion practice or
research?
Briefly summarize the implications of this work for health promotion
practice and/or research. Please avoid overstating the
implications.
Acknowledgments (if applicable)
Written permission must be obtained from each person cited in the
Acknowledgments section. Submit the permission letter(s) with your cover letter.
References
Authors are responsible for the accuracy of their references and for their
correct citation in the text. Number references in the order in which they are
cited in the text. Use superscript Arabic numerals when citing references. Begin
the list of references on a separate page. References should be formatted in the
American Medical Association (AMA) style. Give the complete URL and the date
accessed when citing online addresses. Please also note the following:
- Authors who use automatic bibliographic software must convert the
bibliographic software’s reference style to the Journal style and delete any
embedded links between the citation numbers and the references
- For standard journal articles, list all authors up to 6; for 7 or more
authors, list only the first 3 authors and add "et al."
- Abbreviate journal titles according to the Index Medicus style.
Abbreviations for journal titles are available online (http://www.nlm.nih.gov/tsd/serials/lji.html).
Examples of reference style:
1. Shegog R, McAlister AL, Hu S, Ford KC, Meshack AF, Peters RJ. Use of
interactive
health communication to affect smoking intentions in middle school students: a
pilot test of the "Headbutt" risk assessment program. Am J Health Promot.
2005;19:334 - 338.
2. O'Donnell MP. Health Promotion in the Workplace. Albany, NY: Delmar;
2002.
3. Wilbur CS, Garner D. Marketing health to employees: the Johnson and Johnson
Live for Life Program. In: Frederiksen LW, Soloman LJ,
Brehony KA, eds. Marketing Health Behavior: Principles, Techniques, and
Applications. New York: Plenum Press; 1984:137-163.
4. Lewis MA. The Prevalence of HIV and AIDS Workplace Policies
[dissertation].
Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia: University of Newcastle; 1996.
5. US Bureau of the Census. American Fact Finder, 2000. Available at:
http://www.census.gov. Accessed March 24, 2002.
Manuscripts that have been accepted but not published may be included; in
these cases, provide the journal name followed by "In press". Do not include
"personal communications" in the list of references. Rather, insert them
within the text, using the following style: A written survey was administered to
adults by trained, college aged interviewers (Dr. Patrick O'Malley, personal
communication, April 2005).
Tables and Figures
Up to six tables, figures, graphs, and illustrations are allowed. Refer to
all tables, figures, graphs, and illustrations by number within the text
(callouts) in the order which they appear, each type (tbles, figures, etc.)
should start with number 1. For example: "Smoking was...with different
smokers (Table 1)" or Figure 1 illustrates the relationship between..."
Include a list of all tables, figures, etc., along with captions or
titles, at the end of the article after references tables.
Tables. Tables should supplement, not duplicate, the text. Prepare
table files in Excel or Word format. Number tables in the order in which they
are mentioned in the text. Place each table on a separate page and use
appropriate orientation (portrait or landscape). Most tables can be included
with the manuscript, but they need to be at the end of the references and before
the lists(s) of tables, figures and figure captions, etc. Save large
tables in separate files. Explain in footnotes all non-standard abbreviations
used in each table. Indicate table footnotes with symbols, shown in the
following order: *, ,,§, ׀,¶,
#, **, , , etc. When p values are reported, use the asterisk (*) for the p
values and begin the list of footnotes with the "" symbol.
Figures. Prepare figures in PDF, PPT, XLS, TIFF, JPEG, or DOC format.
Consult the table below for guidance on minimum and ideal figure resolutions.
Save each figure in a separate file (i.e., if there are 5 figures in the
manuscript, 5 figure files should be submitted along with the text file). Place
figure legends, double-spaced, at the end of the text file, after the tables; if
there are no tables, the figure legends should follow the list of references.
| Kind of figure |
File mode |
Ideal resolution |
Minimum resolution |
| Line |
Bitmap |
1200 ppi* |
600 ppi |
| 175L b/w halftone |
Grayscale |
350 ppi |
200 ppi |
| 300L b/w halftone |
Grayscale |
450 ppi |
200 ppi |
| Line/halftone combination |
Grayscale |
600 ppi |
200 ppi |
* ppi indicates pixels per inch.
File Size
Files greater than 5 MB may cause problems for editors and reviewers. If any
of your files are greater than 5 MB, please contact the AllenTrack support team
(support@allentrack.net) before submitting your files.
Instructions for Specific Types of Manuscripts
Quantitative Research
Review Criteria. Quantitative research manuscripts are evaluated based
on their relevance, the quality of the design and execution of the study, and
the quality of the reporting of the study.
Abstract. Prepare an abstract of no more than 220 words. Divide the
abstract into the following headings: Purpose, Design, Setting, Subjects,
Intervention (if appropriate), Measures, Analysis, Results, and
Conclusions. Include sample sizes, response rate, statistical tests used,
primary results in quantitative form, and critical limitations.
Length. Limit Quantitative Research articles to 12 to 18 double-spaced
typed pages, or about 3000 to 4500 words. Avoid preparing articles longer than
5000 words, except in unusual situations.
Text Format. Include the following headings and subheadings: Purpose,
Methods (Design, Sample, Measures, Intervention [if appropriate], and
Analysis), Results, Discussion, and SO WHAT?
Qualitative Research
Review Criteria. Qualitative Research manuscripts are evaluated based
on their relevance, the quality of the design and execution of the study, and
the quality of the reporting of the study.
Abstract. Prepare an abstract of no more than 220 words. Divide the
abstract into the following headings: Purpose, Design, Setting, Subjects,
Intervention (if appropriate), Measures, Analysis, Results, and
Conclusions . Include sample sizes, response rate, statistical tests used,
primary results in quantitative form, and critical limitations.
Length. Limit Qualitative Research articles to 12 to 18 double-spaced
typed pages, or about 3000 to 4500 words. Avoid preparing articles longer than
5000 words, except in unusual situations.
Text Format. Purpose, Approach or Design, Setting, Participants,
Intervention (if appropriate), Method (data collection and analysis
strategies), Results, Conclusion, and SO WHAT?
Systematic Literature Reviews
Review Criteria. Systematic Literature Review manuscripts are
evaluated based on their relevance, scope and design of the review process,
accuracy and astuteness in recognizing trends, and presentation quality of the
review.
Abstract. Prepare an abstract of no more than 220 words. Divide the
abstract into the following headings: Objective, Data Source, Study Inclusion
and Exclusion Criteria, Data Extraction, Data Synthesis, Results, and Conclusions.
Length. Limit review articles to 12 to 18 double-spaced typed pages, or
about 3000 to 4500 words. Avoid preparing articles longer than 5000 words.
Text Format. Include the following headings and subheadings:
Objective, Methods (Data Sources, Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria, Data
Extraction, and Data Synthesis), Results, Conclusions, and SO WHAT?
Critical Issues and Trends
Types of Articles. Articles published in this section describe events
and constructs that are having or will have a major impact on health promotion
practice or research. Articles might describe important legislation, research
breakthroughs, emerging trends, paradigm shifts, emerging policy, or a wide
range of other topics.
Selection Criteria. The following criteria are considered in the review
process: overall importance (A topic of critical importance to the field of
health promotion is addressed; the topic is of interest to readers; and the
author has sufficient credentials to be perceived as credible) and presentation
quality (Length is within the Instructions to Authors guidelines; the writing is
clear; the structure and organization are clear; and sufficient documentation of
controversial claims is presented).
Synopsis. Prepare a synopsis of no more than 100 words.
Length. Limit manuscript length to no more than 1300 words.
Text Format. Any format can be used.
Note. The author’s identity for articles in this format is not blinded
for the review process.
Applied Research Briefs
Types of Articles. Applied Research Briefs are designed to provide
readers with pertinent research findings in a condensed format. These include
original studies that are not appropriate for full-length manuscripts but that
are relevant to the practice of health promotion. These articles highlight work
that can influence how, where, when, what, and for whom health promotion
services are provided. The study findings should be succinct and focused and
provide a clear message about how they apply to the practitioner. The Applied
Research Brief format is appropriate for studies that fall into the following
categories: preliminary studies; simple comparisons between two or more program
alternatives; and studies that have methodologic flaws, such as small sample
sizes or lack of a control group, yet convey important findings.
Review Criteria. Brief reports undergo a review process similar to but
less rigorous than that for Quantitative Research and Qualitative Research
manuscripts. All external reviews are blind and anonymous. For acceptance, the
manuscript should address an important issue, be of interest to practitioners,
illustrate good research in a practice setting, clearly describe the
implications of methodological limitations, be well written and presented, and
be within length guidelines.
Abstract. Prepare an abstract of no more than 220 words. Divide the
abstract into the following headings: Purpose, Design, Setting, Subjects,
Intervention (if appropriate), Measures, Analysis, Results, and
Conclusion. Include sample sizes, response rate, statistical tests used,
primary results in quantitative form, and critical limitations.
Length. The manuscript should be no longer than 1800 words of text, plus
no more than 10 references and two tables or illustrations.
Text Format. Include the following headings, subheadings, and word
counts: Purpose (100 to 200 words), Methods (250 to 600 words:
Design, Sample, Measures, Intervention [if appropriate], and Analysis),
Results (250 to 550 words), and Discussion (250 to 450 words:
Summary, Limitations, Significance).
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References
1. International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. Uniform
Requirements for
Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals: Writing and Editing for Biomedical
Publication. Updated October 2004. Available at: http://www.ICMJE.org.
Accessed July 15, 2005.
2. Flanagin A, Fontanarosa PB, DeAngelis CD. Authorship for research groups.
JAMA.
2002;288:3166–3168.
3. Iverson C, Flanagin A, Fontanarosa PB, et al. American Medical Association
Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors.
9th ed. Baltimore, Md: Williams & Wilkins; 1998:28–51.
4. The World Medical Association, Inc. Declaration of Helsinki: Ethical
Principles for Medical Research Involving Human
Subjects. Updated 2004. Available at: http://www.wma.net. Accessed July 15,
2005.
American Journal of Health Promotion Manuscript Checklist
Please submit this checklist with your manuscript and cover letter. A copy of
this checklist can be downloaded from the AllenTrack website at http://ajhp.allentrack.net
(please note “www” is NOT used with this address).
c The American Journal
of Health Promotion is the only journal to which this manuscript (or one with
essentially the same content) has been submitted.
c The attached manuscript
is of the following type (check one):
____ Quantitative Research
____ Qualitative Research
____ Systematic Literature Review
____ Critical Issues and Trends
____ Applied Research Brief
c The cover letter
contains the contact author’s name, mailing address, phone and fax numbers, and
e-mail address; financial disclosure; and copyright statement.
c The title page shows
the authors’ names, degrees, affiliations, mailing addresses, phone and fax
numbers, e-mail addresses; disclaimer, if any; and a short running head.
c Abstract is formatted
correctly and meets the word count requirement for this type
of manuscript.
c Key Word list and
Indexing Key Word list are included.
c All pages are
double-spaced and numbered.
c A manuscript outline of
main headings and subheadings is included.
c Abstract and text pages
contain line numbers in the left-hand margin.
c SO WHAT? section
included, if appropriate.
c Tables are typed on
separate pages and numbered consecutively. Tables are cited in the text in
chronological order (i.e., Table 1, Table 2, etc.).
c Figures are in separate
files. Figures do not have embedded captions, even if they are graphs or line
drawings.
c References are
formatted according to the American Medical Association style and
numbered.
c Copyright permission
has been obtained for the use of tables, figures or illustrations. The written
copyright permission for each table, figure and illustration is attached.
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