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Instructions for authors

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  • Instructions for authors

   

  • Revised May 2015
  • Revised November 30, 2019
  • Revised March 20, 2020
  • Revised March 16, 2021
  • Revised May 31, 2023

Table of Contents

I. ABOUT THE JOURNAL

1. Aims and Scope

Neonatal Medicine, the official journal of The Korean Society of Neonatology, publishes articles on all aspects of neonatology. These papers encompass both basic science and clinical research, including randomized trials, observational studies, and epidemiology. The journal is published quarterly in February 28th, May 31st, August 31st, and November 30th. Supplements may be published as needed.
Manuscripts submitted to Neonatal Medicine (Neonatal Med) should be prepared according to the following instructions. If not described otherwise below, Neonatal Medicine follows ICMJE’s Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals: Writing and Editing for Biomedical Publication (http://www.icmje.org).

2. Editorial Policy

<STATEMENT REGARDING RESEARCH AND PUBLICATION ETHICS>
For policies on research and publication ethics not stated in these instructions, please refer to the following: “Good Publication Practice Guidelines for Medical Journals” (Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors, 2019, https://www.kamje.or.kr/board//lists?b_name=bo_publication), “Guidelines on Good Publication” (Committee on Publication Ethics, http://www.publicationethics.org/resources/guidelines), and “Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing, and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals” (International Committee of Medical Journal Editors [ICMJE], 2013, http://www.icmje.org). When faced with cases of suspected misconduct, act will be done according to the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE, http://publicationethics.org/) guidelines and flowcharts.
A. Regulation and operation of Research Ethics Committee
This Research Ethics Committee covers ethical issues involved with research and publication for members of this Society. This committee is composed of one chairperson and of the members of the Committee. The president is also the chairperson of this committee. The committee members are appointed by the chairperson and management, academic and editorial chairpersons of the society become ex officio. The members of this committee serves 2 year terms and they may be reappointed.
If presented with convincing evidence of dual publication, fragmentation, plagiarism, fabrication or theft of intellectual property in journals published by the Society, the committee meeting will be held immediately for investigation. If evidence becomes available that the regulation has been breached, publication of corresponding manuscript is immediately canceled and all authors, including the corresponding author, are banned from any publication in the Neonatal Medicine published by the society for the next 3 years. The investigation results of the committee meeting must be notified for immediate disciplinary measures and reported to standing committee and board of directors.
Other issues that are not specified in this regulation abide by the decisions made by board members of the Society which conform with Ethics Code of Science Technology set forth by the Korean Federation of Science Technology Societies. For the policies on the research and publication ethics not stated in this instructions, International standards for editors and authors (https://publicationethics.org/resources/resources-and-further-reading/international-standards-editors-and-authors) can be applied.
B. Protection of human and animal rights
When reporting experiments that involved human subjects, it should be stated that the study was performed according to the Helsinki Declaration (adopted in 1964, amended in 2013; https://www.wma.net/what-we-do/medical-ethics/declaration-of-helsinki/) and approved by the Research Ethics Committee (REC) or the Institutional Review Board (IRB) of the institution where the experiment was performed. Written informed consent should be obtained from all subjects. The editor of Neonatal Medicine may request copies of informed consent forms or IRB approval documents for clinical studies involving human subjects (in original articles and case reports). For animal studies, a statement should be provided indicating that all experimental processes, such as the breeding and use of laboratory animals, were either (1) approved by the REC of the institution where the experiment was performed, (2) not in violation of the rules of the REC of the institution, or (3) compliant with the NIH’s Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (Institute of Laboratory Animal Resources [ILAR], Commission on Life Sciences, National Research Council [NRC], National Academic Press, 1996, 125 pp., http://www.nap.edu/readingroom/books/labrats/index.html). Moreover, studies involving pathogens that require a high degree of biosafety should pass a review by the relevant Institutional Biosafety Committee (IBC). Authors should preserve raw experimental study data for at least one year after the publication of the paper and should submit this data if required by the editorial board.
C. Authors and authorship
An author is considered an individual who has made substantial intellectual contributions to a published study and whose authorship continues to have important academic, social, and financial implications. The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE, 2013) recommends the following criteria for authorship: (1) making substantial contributions to the conception, design, acquisition, analysis, and interpretation of data; (2) drafting the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content; (3) giving final approval to the version to be published; and (4) being accountable for all aspects of the work, ensuring that any questions about its accuracy or integrity are appropriately investigated and resolved. Authors should meet all four criteria. These criteria are applicable to those journals that distinguish authors from other contributors.
When the work is conducted by a large, multicenter group, the group should identify the individuals who accept direct responsibility for the manuscript. When submitting a manuscript authored by a group, the corresponding author should clearly indicate the preferred citation and identify all individual authors as well as the group name. Journals usually list other members of the group in the acknowledgments. Acquiring funding, collecting data, or generally supervising the research group does not alone constitute authorship.
The corresponding author must declare research ethics including authorship by stating following sentences in the cover letter.
“All of the byline authors meet the ICMJE criteria for authorship. We well understand privilege and responsibility of the authorship of the scientific publications. We declare that we are keeping global and/or local guidelines of research and publication ethics strictly including authorship.”
All authors should describe details of individual author's position in the affiliated institution on the online submission system (ex. professor, college lecturer, graduate student, researcher, college student, postdoc, middle and high school teacher, high school student, etc).
D. Prevention of duplicate submissions, duplicate publication, and copyright transfer agreement
Authors should not simultaneously submit the same manuscript, in the same or a different language, to more than one journal. Duplicate publication refers to the publication of a paper that overlaps substantially with one already published, without clear, visible reference to the previous publication. Manuscripts are only accepted for journal publication if they have not been published elsewhere. If an author(s) seeks duplicate or secondary publication for any reason (e.g., for readers of a different language), he or she should obtain approval from the editors in chief of both the first and second journals. In such a case, the author(s) must meet the conditions specified in Ann Intern Med 1997; 12:36–7 (e.g., the author(s) should comment on the duplicate or secondary publication in a footnote on the title page of the secondary version). Each author should sign the authorship responsibility and copyright transfer agreement form, attesting that he or she meets the authorship criteria. Authors are required to specify their contributions to the work described in the manuscript.
E. Protection of privacy, confidentiality, and written informed consent
The ICMJE recommends the following guidelines for the protection of privacy, confidentiality, and written informed consent: The rights of patients should not be infringed without written informed consent. Identifying details should not be published in written descriptions, photographs, or pedigrees unless they are essential for scientific purposes and the patient (or his or her parent or guardian) has provided written informed consent for publication. However, total anonymity can be difficult to achieve; therefore, informed consent should be obtained in the event that patient anonymity is compromised. For example, masking the eyes of patients in photographs does not adequately ensure anonymity. If identifying characteristics are altered to protect anonymity, the author(s) should provide assurance that such changes do not distort scientific meaning, and the editors should take note of this. When informed consent has been obtained, it should be indicated in the published article.
F. Conflicts of interest
Conflicts of interest exist when an author (or the author’s institution), reviewer, or editor has financial or personal relationships that inappropriately influence his or her actions (such relationships are also known as dual commitments, competing interests, or competing loyalties). All authors should disclose any conflicts of interest: (1) financial relationships (e.g., employment, consultancies, stock ownership or options, honoraria, patents, paid expert testimony, etc.), (2) personal relationships and (3) academic competition. Conflicts of interest must be declared in a footnote on the title page or in the acknowledgments. In particular, all sources of funding for a study should be explicitly stated. Each author should certify the disclosure of any conflict of interest with his or her signature.
G. Registration of clinical research
Any research involving clinical trials should be registered with an appropriate national clinical trial registration site, such as https://cris.nih.go.kr/cris/index/index.do or other sites accredited by the World Health Organization or ICMJE.
<PRIOR TO SUBMISSION>
  • - If a manuscript does not present a new result or conclusion, then it should not have the same title as a previously published review article.
  • - Once a case has been published in an original paper, it may not be reproduced as a case report. However, only when a novel diagnostic method, novel therapeutic trial, or previously unknown accompanying condition is found, will the editorial board consider the possibility of its acceptance.
  • - Clinical trials for drugs with commercial implications will be reviewed by the appropriate subcommittee or subspecialty before being reviewed for publication.
  • - Case reports of previously published cases will not be accepted. The editorial board will only make an exception if the case is very rare. The index of the Neonatal Medicine should be reviewed before submitting case reports.
  • - Rejected manuscripts may not be resubmitted.
  • - If an author does not address the reviewers’ comments, or if the manuscript does not follow the journal’s guidelines, it will be rejected.

II. FOR AUTHORS

1. Information for Authors

Detailed Korean version is also available in website: http://submit.neo-med.org.
<TYPES OF MANUSCRIPTS>
Neonatal Medicine publishes invited review articles, original articles, case reports, and news. Invited review articles offer concise reviews of important subjects in neonatology and are written by invitation only. The invited review articles are accepted after editorial evaluation. Original articles are papers that present the results of clinical or laboratory investigations and are sufficiently well documented to be acceptable to critical readers. Case reports deal with interesting
- Types of publication
Review article : The journal accepts both invited and submitted review articles. A mini-review is a short review of a specific topic that is included in a regular issue of the journal.
Original article : Such an article presents original research on neonatology, neonatal diseases, and related basic or clinical research. The manuscript should not be more than 40 references.
Case report : Descriptions of clinical cases (an individual case or a series of cases) should be unique and should preferably be first-time reports. The manuscript should include an unstructured abstract (200 words maximum), and no more than 20 references.
Letter to the editor : A letter should contain constructive criticisms or comments on a specific paper published by the journal within the previous 6 months. The manuscript should be no more than one page (A4), with the number of references limited to five.
Images of interest : The purpose of the Image of Interest is to present state-of-the-art imaging that assists in evaluating unusual features of common conditions or diagnosing unusual cases. Images should be pathologic and radiographic with high quality and illustrate the full spectrum of the disorder. The manuscript should not be more than one page (A4), with the number of references limited to five.
Editorial : Editorials are invited by the editor and should be commentaries on articles published recently in the Journal. Editorial topics could include active areas of research, fresh insights, and debates in all fields of neonatology. The manuscript should not be more than 20 references.
Erratum/revision/addendum/retraction : The journal may publish such editorial notices as well.
<MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION>
Manuscripts must be written in English or Korean. Manuscripts submitted with incorrect formatting will be returned to the corresponding author. The manuscript should be prepared using Microsoft Word and saved as a document file (.doc). The text—including tables, table footnotes, and figure legends—must be double spaced in a standard 12-point font on A4-sized paper. It must have left and right margins of at least 2 cm and top and bottom margins of 3 cm. Minor changes to formatting or phrases will be made according to the publication policy of the editorial board and by the English editor.
The manuscript should be arranged in the following sequence: title page, abstract and keywords, introduction, materials and methods, results, discussion, acknowledgments, references, tables, and figure legends. In a case report, the materials and methods and results sections are replaced by the case section. All pages should be consecutively numbered, starting with the title page, centered at the bottom of the page. Each section should begin on a new page. Neonatal Medicine recommends a total of 10 printed pages for reviews and original articles and 5 pages for case reports.
A. Title page
The title page must include a title, the authors’ names and academic degrees (include ORCID*), affiliations, corresponding authors’ names and contact information, ethical statement (including IRB, approval number, and informed consents), and authors' contribution.
*ORCID: We recommend that the open researcher and contributor ID (ORCID) of all authors be provided. To have an ORCID, authors should register in the ORCID website: http://orcid.org/. Registration is free to every researcher in the world.
A separate paragraph should provide the name of the corresponding author and his or her degree, address (institution, city, zip code, and country), telephone number, fax number, and e-mail address. Information about sources of financial support should be given in a footnote. The running title should be 10 words or less, and it should not be a declarative or interrogative sentence. The title should not use ampersands (&).
B. Abstract and Key words
The abstract should be concise (less than 250 words) and briefly describe the purpose, methods, important results, and conclusions of the study in a structured format. Abbreviations, if needed, should be kept to a minimum and properly identified. Abstracts for case reports may deviate from this format and use an unstructured format. The abstract should not include footnotes, tables, or references. Up to 10 keywords should be provided below the abstract for indexing purposes. Use terms from the list of medical subject headings (MeSH) provided by Index Medicus. If suitable MeSH terms are not yet available for recently introduced terms, current terms may be used.
C. Introduction
The introduction describes the most pertinent papers and other relevant findings. It also includes the specific question driving the investigation.
D. Materials and Methods
We endorse the Helsinki Declaration and expect that all investigations involving human subjects are performed in accordance with its principles. For animal experimentation, the Guiding Principles for the Care and Use of Animals, approved by the American Physiological Society, must be observed. The experimental methods should be explained concisely but with enough detail that they can be repeated by other investigators. Previously published procedures should not be described in detail; however, new or significant modifications require full descriptions.
Ensure the correct use of the terms “sex” (when reporting biological factors) and “gender” (identity, psychosocial, or cultural factors), and, unless inappropriate, report the sex and/or gender of study participants, the sex of animals or cells, and describe the methods used to determine sex and gender. If the study was done involving an exclusive population, for example, in only one sex, authors should justify why, except in obvious cases. Authors should define how they determined race or ethnicity and justify their relevance.
The sources of special chemicals or preparations should be given (i.e., company name). All statistical methods and the criteria for significance levels should be described. In case reports, the materials and methods and results sections are replaced by case histories or case descriptions. All units should be expressed metrically according to the international system of units (SI).
E. Results
This section should be logically presented using text, tables, and illustrations. Avoid excessive textual repetition of the contents of tables or figures.
F. Discussion
The data should be interpreted concisely without repeating material already presented in the results section. Speculation is permitted, but it must be supported by the data and well founded.
G. Acknowledgment
All people who made substantial contributions but are not eligible as authors are named here. All sources of funding applicable to the study should be stated here explicitly.
H. References
In-text reference citations should be consecutive numbers placed in parentheses (Vancouver style). The references section should list the works in the order they were cited in the text alonge with the corresponding number. The style for articles in periodicals is as follows: the name and initials of the authors (use et al. for six or more authors), full title of article, journal name abbreviated according to Index Medicus, year, volume, and first and last page numbers. The style for a chapter in a book is as follows: the author, title of the chapter, editor of the book, title of the book, edition, volume, publisher, year, and first and last page numbers.
Authors are responsible for the accuracy and completeness of their references and citations. In-press papers may be listed in the references with the journal name and tentative year of publication. Unpublished data or personal communications can be listed only with the author’s written permission.
Other types of references not described below should follow The NLM Style Guide for Authors, Editors, and Publishers (Patrias K. Citing medicine: the NLM style guide for authors, editors, and publishers [Internet]. 2nd ed. National Library of Medicine [US]; 2007 [updated 2009 Jan 14; cited 2009 Aug 1]).
Available from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK7256
Examples of reference style:
1. Journal articles
  • a) Standard journal article
    Bae CW, Takahashi A, Chida S, Sasaki M. Morphology and function of pulmonary surfactant inhibited by meconium. Pediatr Res 1998;44:187-91.
  • b) Journal article with organization as author
    American Academy of Pediatrics. Work Group on Breastfeeding. Breastfeeding and the use of human milk. Pediatrics 1997;100: 1035-9.
  • c) Supplement/part/special number to a volume for journal articles
    Orzalesi M. Vitamins and the premature. Biol Neonate 1979;52 Suppl 1:97-112.
  • d) Article type for journal articles
    Spargo PM, Manners JM. DDAVP and open heart surgery [letter]. Anaesthesia 1989;44:363-4.
2. Books
  • a) Individual volume
    Volpe JJ. Neurology of the newborn. 3rd ed. WB Saunders Co, 1995:35-9.
  • b) Part (chapter) of a book
    Menendez AA, Alea OA, Beckerman RC. Control of ventilation and apnea. In: Goldsmith JP, Karotkin EH, editors. Assisted ventilation of the neonate. 3rd ed. WB Saunders Co, 1996:69-81.
  • c) Conference publications
    Vivian VL, editor. Child abuse and neglect: a medical community response. Proceedings of the First AMA National Conference on Child Abuse and Neglect; 1984 Mar 30-31 (date); Chicago (location). Chicago (city): American Medical Association (name of meeting), 1985 (year).
  • d) Theses and dissertations
    Kaplan SJ. Post-hospital home health care: the elderly’s access and utilization (dissertation). Washington Univ., 1995.
3. Forthcoming (“in press”)
Leshner AI. Molecular mechanisms of cocaine addiction. N Engl J Med. In press 1996.
4. Material on the Internet (online)
  • a) Electronic article—with DOI
    Fletcher D, Wagstaff CRD. Organisational psychology in elite sport: its emergence, application and future. Psychol Sport Exerc 2009;10(4):427-34. doi:10.1016/j.psychsport.2009. 03.009
  • b) Electronic article—without DOI
    Lemanek K. Adherence issues in the medical management of asthma. J Pediatr Psychol [Internet] 1990 [cited 2010 Apr 22];15(4):437-58. Available from: http://jpepsy.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/15/4/437
  • c) Electronic book—entire book
    Bartlett A. Breastwork: rethinking breastfeeding [monograph online]. University of New South Wales Press; 2005 [cited 2009 Nov 10]. Available from: NetLibrary.
  • d) Chapter from an electronic book
    Darwin C. On the origin of species by means of natural selection or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life [Internet]. John Murray; 1859. Chapter 5, Laws of variation [cited 2010 Apr 22]. Available from: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/origin/chapter5.html
5. Reports and other government publications
Page E, Harney JM. Health hazard evaluation report. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (US); 2001 Feb. 24 p. Report No.:HETA2000- 0139-2824.
6. Website
International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. Uniform requirements for manuscripts submitted to biomedical journals: writing and editing for biomedical publication [Internet]. International Committee of Medical Journal Editors; 1979 [cited 2009 Nov 1]. Available from: http://www.icmje.org/urm_main.html
I. Tables and figures
Tables and figures should be submitted separately from the text of the paper, and figure legends should be embedded in the manuscript file as a separate sheet at the end of manuscript. Both JPEG and TIFF formats are acceptable for figures. Tables should be simple and not duplicate information found in the figures. Title all tables and number them with Arabic numerals in the order they are cited in the text. Type each table on a separate sheet. Describe all abbreviations under the table. The tables should not use diagonal or horizontal lines. Only numbers and English text should be used in the tables and figures. References should be made in the following order: *, †, ‡, §, ∥, ¶, **.
Clear, glossy prints are acceptable in place of original drawings, provided all parts of the figures are in focus. X-ray films and Polaroid photographs are not acceptable. Except for complicated illustrations that present large amounts of data, all figures are published on one page or one column width; when the figures are reduced to the size of a single column or single page width, the smallest parts of the figure must be legible.
All photographs should be of high quality; the preferred scan resolution for photographs is 300 dpi. Color photographs will only be published if the editor agrees they are absolutely necessary. Expenses for reproducing color photographs will be charged to the author; current estimates for color reproduction can be obtained from the Editorial Office. The author is responsible for submitting prints that are of sufficient quality to permit accurate reproduction and for approving the final color galley proofs. All photographs should be correctly exposed and sharply focused. Neonatal Medicine assumes no responsibility for the quality of photographs as they appear in the journal. Symbols, arrows, or letters used in photographs should contrast with the background. Each light microscopic photograph should have a legend that includes the name of the stain and the magnification; electron microscopic photographs should have an internal scale marker. All types of figures may be reduced, enlarged, or trimmed for publication by the editor.
All figure legends should be double spaced. Do not use a separate sheet for each legend. Figure legends should briefly describe the data and explain any abbreviations or reference points in the photograph. If there are more than two figures under the same title, they should be labeled Figure 1A, Figure 1B, etc. When referencing a table or figure in the manuscript, write (Table 1), (Figure 1), etc.
J. General guidelines
  • 1. All numbers should be Arabic numerals, and all measurements are expressed using the metric system. Laboratory values are expressed using conventional units of measure, with the relevant international system of units (SI). Leave a space between the number and the unit (except for % and °). There should be a space between English text and parentheses.
  • 2. Generic names should be used. When proprietary brands are used for devices, drugs, or reagents, include the name of the manufacturer.
  • 3. Lowercase letters are used throughout the manuscript, except for locations, names, proper nouns, abbreviations, etc., where capital letters are needed.
  • 4. The species names of microorganisms are italicized. The whole name should be given first (e.g., Echerichia coli), followed by an abbreviation (E. coli). All Latin expressions (e.g., in vitro, in vivo, versus) are italicized. However, when using vs. as an abbreviation for versus, it does not need to be italicized.
  • 5. When citing a reference in the manuscript, only the last name of the author is given. If there is one author, use “Smith1)”; for two authors, “Lee and Park2)”; more than three, “Edward et al.3).”
  • 6. For abbreviations, provide the full term the first time it appears, then use only the abbreviation.
  • 7. If there are multiple contents, use subtitles for the materials/ methods and results sections.
  • 8. For statistical analyses, please describe the statistical test used and the value of P considered to be significant. (e.g., P < 0.05). However, the current trend is to state the exact P values (e.g., P = 0.004), which is also desirable. P should be capitalized and italicized with a hyphen between P and “value” (i.e., P-value).
  • 9. The conclusion of the manuscript should be situated at the end of the discussion section, not as a standalone section.
  • 10. Manuscripts written in English by nonnative speakers should be checked prior to submission by a professional editing service or someone with comparable English-language skills. The English editing checklist should be submitted along with the proofreader’s name, credentials, and comments on the manuscript.

<SCREENING BEFORE REVIEW>
If the manuscript does not fit the aims and scope of the Journal, or does not adhere to the Instructions for Authors, it may be returned to the author immediately after receipt and without a review from the publisher. Before reviewing, all submitted manuscripts are inspected by Similarity Check powered by iThenticate (https://www. crossref.org/services/similarity-check/), a plagiarism-screening tool. If there is a too high a degree of similarity score found in the submitted manuscript as indicated by the score of the checker, the Editorial Board will do a more profound content screening. The criterion for similarity rate for further screening is usually 15%, this means that no more than 15% of the manuscript may be found to be similar to another already published manuscript. However, the excess amount of similarity in specific sentences may be also checked in every manuscript. For this reason, it is imperative that the author checks the manuscript before submission to rule out similarities to other published works. The settings for the Similarity Check screening works as follows: The tool excludes information from the total score of the reviewed manuscript which are quotes, the bibliography, any small matches of six words that are deemed to be similar, small sources of 1%, and the Methods section of the study.

<PEER REVIEW PROCESS>
Neonatal Medicine reviews all received materials.
Manuscripts are sent to three relevant referees to review the content. The editor selects the referees. The results of the reviews will be classified as follows:
Accepted: the manuscript will be forwarded to the publisher without further corrections.
Minor revisions: the author should address the reviewers’ comments, which will be checked by the reviewers before being sent to the publisher.
Major revisions: the author should address the comments from the reviewers and make the appropriate corrections, which will then be checked by the three reviewers.
Rejection: if one of the three reviewers rejects the manuscript, the final decision will be made by the editorial committee.
Consultation: review of the manuscript will be done through consultation with subcommittees and subspecialties.

<REVISION OF PROOFS AND PUBLICATION>
In the revision process, the author should submit three documents: the revised manuscript, a manuscript with the revised parts highlighted, and the author’s responses to the reviewers’ comments. After the corrections are made, the accepted manuscript will be sent to the publisher for printing. The proofs may be revised more than once by the corresponding author, if needed. The author should double check for corrections in the content, title, affiliation, capitalization, locations of figures, and references. The corresponding author is responsible for further corrections made after printing. If a revised draft is not returned within six months, it is considered withdrawn.

<ARTICLE PROCESSING CHARGE>
An article processing charge of ₩30,000 (Korean won) will be applicable for articles accepted for publication in the Neonatal Medicine.
Submission of the article to the journal can be completed once the payment method has been agreed. Any applicable article processing charge must be paid prior to publication.

NOTE: The article processing charges are waived for articles from low income countries.
Low income countries:
https://datahelpdesk.worldbank.org/knowledgebase/articles/906519

<CONFIRMATION OF ACCEPTANCE>
Once the manuscript is sent to the publisher, confirmation of acceptance by Neonatal Medicine (www.neo-med.org) may be issued. Registering for the board exams, a receipt of confirmation with two reprints may be ordered for the accepted manuscript. An additional fee is required for these reprints.

2. Electronic manuscript submission

Authors should submit manuscripts via the electronic manuscript management system of The Korean Society of Neonatology (www.neo-med.org). Manuscripts should be submitted by the corresponding author, who should provide his or her address and phone number on the title page of the manuscript. If available, a fax number and e-mail address should be provided as well. Revised manuscripts should be submitted through the same web system under the same identification numbers.

1) To submit your manuscript, go to www.neo-med.org.
Instructions for online submission are given on this website. The website also links to the home page of The Korean Society of Neonatology (www.neonatology.or.kr) from the left-hand menu or the menu bar at the top.
2) Neonatal Medicine charge a fee ₩100,000 (Korean won) at the time of manuscript submission to help to fund editorial and peer review administration. It must be wired to Shin Han Bank (100-025-746436) in the name of the corresponding author or first author.
3) Confirmation of receipt will be issued when the submission process is complete. The receipt can be downloaded from the website.
4) Online submission process:
  • - Choose “e-Submission” at www.neo-med.org.
  • - Log in (or click “create account” if you are a first-time user).
  • - Click on the manuscript submission button on the left or on the top menu bar.
  • - Choose the appropriate format of your manuscript.
  • - Complete the checklist for your manuscript type.
  • - Complete the copyright form.
  • - Fill in the information for all authors, along with the relevant contact information.
  • - Fill in the title, affiliations, authors, and abstract and upload the manuscript (the manuscript will automatically convert to a PDF file; this will take some time).
  • - The status of the manuscript can be viewed on the homepage.
  • - Click the submission button to complete the submission process.

3. Contact us

34, Sajik-ro 8–gil(King’s Gargen 3 Block 1207), Jongno-gu, Seoul 03174, Republic of Korea
Tel: +82-2-730-1993
Fax: +82-2-730-1994
E-mail: neonate2002@hanmail.net
Website: http://www.neonatology.or.kr


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