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Setting standards for medical writing in orthopaedics

Abstract

Once the privilege of few clinical scholars in the field of orthopaedics, medical writing has become a must for career advancement. The number of papers submitted and published yearly has increased steadily, and with the development of the Internet, manuscript and journals have become easily accessible. Medical writing has risen to become a discipline in itself, with rules and standards. However, heterogeneity in the quality of papers submitted still prevails, with large variations in both form and content. With countries such as China and India submitting an exponential number of manuscripts, it is important and helpful that standards of medical writing be emphasised to help writers who do not always have the required support to produce an outstanding manuscript. In this paper, we summarise what may become standards for medical writing in the field of orthopaedics.

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Conflict of interest

Short parts of this manuscript were inspired by a PowerPoint presentation on medical writing (Springer-Verlag).

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Correspondence to Cyril Mauffrey.

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Dr. C. Mauffrey is editor in chief for Trauma and Intensive Medicine, deputy editor for the European Journal of Surgery and Traumatology, associate editor for Current Orthopaedic Practice, Patient Safety in Surgery Journal and BMC Surgery. Dr. M.M. Scarlat is deputy editor for the European Journal of Surgery and Traumatology, assistant editor for International Orthopaedics, member of the editorial board of the Indian Orthopaedic Journal. Prof. M. Pecina is editor in chief for International Orthopaedics, corresponding member of the editorial board of Hip International, assistant editorial board of the European Spine Journal, editorial board of Acta Chirurgicae Orthopaedicae et Traumatologiae Čechoslovaka, editor in chief of the Journal of Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts – Medical Sciences, establisher and president of the Editorial Council of Croatian Sports Medicine Journal, member of the editorial council of Journals Liječnički Vjesnik, Medicus and Medix.

Recommendations for young writers following the Medical Writing Symposium at the SICOT World Orthopaedic Congress – Hyderabad, India, 19 October 19 2013.

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Mauffrey, C., Scarlat, M.M. & Pećina, M. Setting standards for medical writing in orthopaedics. International Orthopaedics (SICOT) 38, 1–5 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00264-013-2189-6

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00264-013-2189-6

Keywords

  • Medical writing
  • Publication
  • Notoriety
  • How to get published
  • Standards to write a paper
  • Research
  • Methodology
  • How to write a paper
  • Medical publication
  • Medical editing
  • Orthopaedic surgery
  • Academic orthopaedic surgery
  • Reference
  • Impact factor