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Progress in Transplantation

Progress in Transplantation

The Journal for Procurement and Clinical Transplant Professionals

eISSN: 21646708 | ISSN: 15269248 | Current volume: 34 | Current issue: 1-2 Frequency: Quarterly
Transplantation is a highly specialized area of medicine designed to improve the quality of life for individuals with serious and complex end organ failure. PIT reflects the multi-disciplinary team approach to procurement and clinical aspects of organ and tissue transplantation and provides a professional forum for disseminate knowledge. The journal accepts manuscripts on adult and pediatric organ transplantation from organ donor awareness, organ procurement, to early and long-term recipient outcomes. Manuscripts must meet the submission guidelines.

This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).

Progress in Transplantation is an international peer-reviewed journal that gives voice to the multiple disciplines that are involved in organ and tissue transplantation. The aim of the journal is to disseminate scholarly articles on organ transplantation and follows the ethical standards set forth by the Committee on Publication Ethics. We accept manuscripts on adult and pediatric organ and tissue transplantation from organ donor awareness, organ procurement, to early and long-term recipient outcomes. Manuscripts must meet the submission guidelines.

Editor
Editor Emeritus
Advisory Editorial Board
Haley Hoy, PhD, NP Nashville, TN
Christiane Kugler, PhD Freiburg, Germany
Stacee Lerret, PhD, RN, CPNP-AC/PC, CCTC Milwaukee, WI, USA
Henry Randall, MD St. Louis, MO, USA
  • CINAHL
  • Clarivate Analytics: Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE)
  • EMBASE
  • International Nursing Index
  • PubMed: MEDLINE
  • Progress in Transplantation (The Journal, PIT), the official publication of NATCO (The Organization for Donation and Transplant Professionals) with partners from the Australasian Transplant Co-Ordinators Association, publishes a broad range of peer-reviewed clinical and procurement articles for transplant professionals. PIT has moved to online with limited print availability.

    There are no fees payable to submit or publish in this Journal. Open Access options are available - see section below.

    PIT offers optional open access publishing via the Sage Choice programme and Open Access agreements, where authors can publish open access either discounted or free of charge depending on the agreement with Sage. Find out if your institution is participating by visiting Open Access Agreements at Sage. For more information on Open Access publishing options at Sage please visit Sage Open Access. For information on funding body compliance, and depositing your article in repositories, please visit Sage’s Author Archiving and Re-Use Guidelines and Publishing Policies.

    The author guidelines are designed to facilitate time to publication. Read and follow.

    This journal follows the ethical guidelines from the Committee on Publication Ethics.

     

    General publication information
    Aim and Scope
    Peer Review Policy
    Publication Ethics
         Plagiarism
              Self-plagiarism
         Research ethics
         Protection of patients’ rights to privacy
         Research Data
    ORCID
    Acknowledgements
         Funding acknowledgment
         Declaration of Conflicting Interests Statement
    Copyright and transfer disclosure
    Report standards
    Authorship requirements
    Writing assistance
         English language editing services
    Open access and author archiving
    Information required for completing your submission
         On acceptance and publication
         Complaints and Appeals 
    Manuscript Types and Formatting Guidelines
         Manuscript formatting
         AMA Manual of Style, 11th edition 
         Manuscript type grid (quick reference table)
              Submission
              Cover letter 
              Title page
              Acknowledgements
              Funding
              Declaration of conflicting interests
              Keywords
              Permissions
              Abstract
              Manuscript text
              Table
              Figure
         Additional resource for structuring manuscripts
         Manuscript Types and requirements
              Short Communication
              Case Report
              Clinical Procurement Practice Issue
              Clinical Transplant Practice Issue
              Evidence-Based Practice (EBP)
              Performance Improvement (PI)
              Program Evaluation
              Qualitative Research
              Quantitative Research
              Systematic Review
              Clinical Practice Guidelines
              Bibliometric Analysis
    Editor Contact Information
    References
    AMA Style Guideline for Progress in Transplantation
    Author Submission Checklist

     

    Progress in Transplantation (The Journal), the official publication of NATCO, The Organization for Donation and Transplant Professionals publishes a broad range of peer-reviewed clinical and procurement articles for transplant professionals. Progress in Transplantation has moved to online with limited print availability. There are no fees payable to submit or publish with this journal.

    The author guidelines are designed to facilitate time to publication. Read and follow.

    This journal follows the ethical guidelines from the Committee on Publication Ethics.
     

    General publication information

    Aim and Scope: Progress in Transplantation publishes articles that reflect the multi-disciplinary team approach to procurement and clinical aspects of organ and tissue transplantation. The journal publishes quantitative and qualitative research, procurement and clinical practice issues, evidence-based practice, performance improvement projects, case studies, systematic reviews, program evaluations, and clinical practice guidelines. The journal does not accept basic science research.

    Peer Review Policy: To provide authors with a blinded peer review, do not put personal, institutional, or organizational information within the manuscript text or headers. Author names, institutions, or organizations will be entered separately in SAGE Track and placed in a separate title page. Each manuscript will have a minimum of two reviewers. Authors and reviewers are blinded.

    When members of the Editorial Advisory Board submit their own work for possible publication, peer review will be managed by the Editor and Associate Editors so that there will be no conflict of interest or involvement in the decision-making process.

    Please note that the Journal does not accept submissions of papers that have been posted on pre-print servers.

    Your article must NOT be under consideration for publication elsewhere; you will be asked to verify this claim in the submission process.

    Publication Ethics: NATCO and The Journal are committed to uphold academic integrity. We encourage authors to refer to the Committee on Publication Ethics’ International Standards for Authors and view the Ethics & Responsibility page on the Sage Author Gateway. This journal also recommends that authors follow the Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing, and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals.

    Plagiarism: Plagiarism or other breaches of publication ethics are serious issues. We seek to protect the rights of our authors and will investigate claims of plagiarism or misuse of published articles. Equally, we seek to protect the reputation of The Journal against malpractice and will check articles with duplication-checking software. Where an article is found to have plagiarized other work or included third-party copyright material without permission or with insufficient acknowledgement, or where the authorship of the article is contested, we reserve the right to take action that includes, but not limited to: publishing an erratum or corrigendum (correction); retracting the article; taking up the matter with the head of department or dean of the author’s institution and/or relevant academic bodies or societies; and/or taking appropriate legal action.

    Self-plagiarism: When an author reuses or recycles work and passes it off as new work it is considered self-plagiarism. This can happen when an author publishes several manuscripts from one study or as his/her program of research begins to develop with a series of publications on the topic. It is considered research misconduct, with applicable appropriate legal action. When self-plagiarism is detected with duplication-checking software, the author will be given an opportunity to correct. Information of self-plagiarism is available at https://ori.hhs.gov/self-plagiarism

    Research ethics: Medical research involving human subjects must be conducted according to the World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki

    Submitted manuscripts should conform to the ICMJE Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing, and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals, and all papers reporting animal and/or human studies must state in the methods section that the relevant Ethics Committee or Institutional Review Board provided (or waived) approval. Please ensure that you have provided the full name of the review committee, in addition to the approval number.

    Protection of patients’ rights to privacy: For Progress in Transplantation, include the following statements within the design subheading: The study was approved by the institutional review board (or ethics committee if appropriate) and if humans subjects were used, informed consent was obtained from all individuals included in the study. Do not include the name of institution or hospital. This will keep blinding intact.

    Information on informed consent to report individual cases or case series should be included in the manuscript text. A statement is required regarding whether written informed consent for patient information, description, pedigrees, and images to be published was provided by the patient(s) or a legally authorized representative. Use of private health information of minors needs to include assent from the minor and consent from the parents.

    Please do not submit the patient’s actual written informed consent with your article, as this this breaches the patient’s confidentiality. The Journal requests that you confirm to us, in writing, that you have obtained written informed consent but the written consent itself should be held by the authors/investigators themselves, for example in a patient’s hospital record. The confirmatory letter may be uploaded with your submission as a separate file. The Editor reserves the right to request a copy of informed consent document, if applicable.

    Identifying details should be avoided unless the information is essential to scientific understanding and the patient or family has given written informed consent. Identifying details (names, dates of birth, identity numbers and other information) should be omitted if they are not essential. For example, masking the eye region in photographs of patients is inadequate protection of anonymity. Ethical publication of identifying details includes allowing those consenting to publication of their private information be given the chance to read the manuscript before it is submitted. Authors must provide a statement in the manuscript about obtaining informed consent to publish when identifying details are included in the text.

    Please also refer to the ICMJE Recommendations for the Protection of Research Participants

    Research Data: At SAGE we are committed to facilitating openness, transparency, and reproducibility of research. Where relevant, The Journal encourages authors to share their research data in a suitable public repository subject to ethical considerations and where data is included, to add a data accessibility statement in their manuscript file. Authors should also follow data citation principles. For more information please visit the SAGE Author Gateway, which includes information about SAGE’s partnership with the data repository Figshare.  

    ORCID: SAGE is a supporting member of ORCID, the Open Researcher and Contributor ID. ORCID provides a unique and persistent digital identifier that distinguishes researchers from every other researcher, even those who share the same name, and, through integration in key research workflows such as manuscript and grant submission, supports automated linkages between researchers and their professional activities, ensuring that their work is recognized.

    The collection of ORCID IDs from corresponding authors is now part of the submission process of this journal. If you already have an ORCID ID you will be asked to associate that to your submission during the online submission process. We also strongly encourage all co-authors to link their ORCID ID to their accounts in our online peer review platforms.

    Click the link when prompted, sign into your ORCID account and our systems are automatically updated. Your ORCID ID will become part of your accepted publication’s metadata, making your work attributable to you and only you. Your ORCID is published with your article so that fellow researchers reading your work can link to your ORCID profile and from there link to your other publications.

    If you do not already have an ORCID, use this link to create one or visit  ORCID homepage.

    Acknowledgements: All contributors who do not meet the criteria for authorship should be listed in an Acknowledgements section on the title page. Criteria for authorship is based on the 4 recommendations of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors.  See https://www.icmje.org/recommendations/browse/roles-and-responsibilities/defining-the-role-of-authors-and-contributors.html for the list of the criteria, Examples of those who might be acknowledged include persons who provided purely technical help or a department chair who provided general support. Acknowledgements that thank subjects or a group of non-study related persons or groups will be omitted. Acknowledgements are limited to 3 lines.

    Funding acknowledgment: A funding statement is included on the Title page. See the Funding Acknowledgments page on the SAGE Author Gateway to acquire the acknowledgment format. If the project was not funded use the statement: The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

    Declaration of Conflicting Interests Statement: Authors must disclose all relationships or interests that could influence or bias the work. These may include but are not limited to personal relationships or competing interests directly or indirectly tied to this research, or professional interests or personal beliefs that may influence your research. The appropriate wording for no conflicts is:

    • The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

    Copyright and transfer disclosure: Authors submitting manuscripts do so on the understanding that the work has not been published before, is not being considered for publication elsewhere, and has been read and approved by all authors. The submission of the manuscript means that authors automatically agree to assign Exclusive License to Publish to NATCO when the manuscript is accepted for publication. It is sufficient for the corresponding author to sign the form on behalf of all authors.

    Authors will be expected to disclose any affiliation with or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in the subject matter or material discussed in the manuscript.

    SAGE provides authors a link to their final article. Online First is a service to authors to have articles published online prior to their inclusion in a print issue. This reduces the lead time between submission and publication. For more information, please visit our Online First Fact Sheet in the SAGE Author Gateway.

    Report standards: The Journal endorses the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) that provides researchers with a standardized method for reporting clinical trials. A 25-item checklist for preparing research reports is available at www.consort-statement.com. Authors are encouraged to follow guidelines.  For additional standardized methods for reporting, refer to www.equator-network.org

    Authorship requirements: All persons listed as authors must have 1) participated sufficiently in the work to take public responsibility for the content; or 2) made substantial contributions to the conception and design or analysis and interpretation of data; or 3) participated in drafting of the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content; and 4) given final approval of the version of the manuscript to be published.

    Authors must certify that the manuscript consists of original work and does not copy or otherwise infringe on the copyright or other proprietary rights of others; that all necessary permissions for borrowed material have been obtained, copies of which will be submitted; and authorization has been obtained and will be submitted to disclose any identifiable or potentially identifiable private health information of patients.

    Writing assistance: Individuals who are provided writing assistance, e.g., from a specialist communication company, do not qualify as authors and so should be included in the Acknowledgements section. Authors must disclose any writing assistance, including the individuals’ name, company and level of input, and identify the entity that paid for this assistance.

    English language editing services: Authors seeking assistance with English language editing, translation, or figure and manuscript formatting to fit The Journal’s specifications should consider using SAGE Language Services found on the SAGE Author Gateway.

    Open access and author archiving: Optional open access publishing via the SAGE Choice program is available. For more information, please visit the SAGE Choice website. For information on funding body compliance and depositing your article in repositories, please visit SAGE Publishing Policies on our SAGE Author Gateway.

    Information required for completing your submission: You will be asked to provide contact details and academic affiliations for all co-co-authors via the submission system and identify who is to be the corresponding author. These details must match what appears on title page. The affiliation listed in the manuscript should be the institution where the research was conducted. If an author has moved to a new institution after completing the research, the new affiliation can be included in a manuscript note at the end of the paper. At this stage, please ensure you have included all the required statements and declarations and uploaded any additional supplementary files (including reporting guidelines where relevant).

    On acceptance and publication: Your SAGE production editor will keep you informed as to your article’s progress throughout the production process. Proofs will be made available to the corresponding author via our editing portal SAGE Edit or by email, and corrections should be made directly in the document or notify the Production Editor promptly. Authors are reminded to check their proofs carefully to confirm that all author information, including names, affiliations, sequence and contact details are correct, and the Funding and Conflict of Interest statements, if any, are accurate. Please note that if there are any changes to the author list at this stage all authors will be required to complete and sign a form authorizing the change.

    Complaints and Appeals: Editors have a broad discretion in determining whether an article is an appropriate fit for their journal. Many manuscripts are declined with a very general statement of the rejection decision. These decisions are not eligible for formal appeal unless the author believes the decision to reject the manuscript was based on an error in the review of the article, in which case the author may appeal the decision by providing the Editor with a detailed written description of the error they believe occurred. All decisions are final.

    If an author believes the decision regarding their manuscript was affected by a publication ethics breach, the author may contact the publisher with a detailed written description of their concern, and information supporting the concern, at publication_ethics@sagepub.com

    Manuscript Types and Formatting Guidelines

    Progress in Transplantation is a specialty society journal. The Editor advises authors to follow the instructions. This will prevent multiple returns for revisions and extensive editing prior to acceptance.

    Manuscript formatting: This information applies to all submissions to The Journal. Manuscripts that do not conform to the guidelines will be returned.

    • Submit text in Word.doc or Word.docx, (please do not submit any files in pdf format)
    • Double space
    • 1-inch margins
    • Left alignment
    • Do not use first person
    • Ariel or Times New Roman type face; 12 font (Editor prefers Times New Roman)
    • Set before and after paragraph spacing at 0 pt
    • Required subheadings will be listed under each manuscript type. Use additional subheadings as needed.
    • Submit tables in Word.doc or Word.docx format (please do not submit images or .pdf of tables as they must be editable)
    • Figures may be submitted in Word.doc, Word.docx, .gif or jpg, formats
    • Do not insert tables or figures in the manuscript text

    Follow AMA Manual of Style, 11th edition for manuscript style and reference formatting.

    • Citations in the text are superscript outside commas or periods.1
    • The reference list is numbered in the order in which they appear in text, tables, or figures.
    • Material not yet accepted for publication or personal communication are not listed in the reference list.
    • Abbreviate journal names as used in PubMed.
    • List all authors and/or editors up to 6; if more than 6, list the first 3 followed by “et al.”

    See below for a reference list format example. The reference list with this document

    follows the AMA Manual of Style.

    1. Youngster I, Russell GH, Pindar C, Ziv-Baran T, Sauk J, Hohmann EL. Oral, capsulized, frozen fecal microbiota transplantation for relapsing Clostridium difficile infection. JAMA. 2014;312 (17):1772-1778.

    The following manuscript types are accepted for review with The Journal. The Journal does not accept basic science research. All topics should be of interest or applicable to transplant professionals.

    Manuscript type grid

    Type

    Word Limit

    Abstract Word limit

    Reference Maximum

    Table Maximum

    Figure Maximum

    Short Communication

    500

    No abstract

    1-3

    1

    1

    Case Report

    500

    No abstract

    1-5

    1

    1

    Clinical Procurement Practice Issue

    1500

    150 (unstructured)

    5-10

    1

    1

    Clinical Transplant Practice Issue

    1500

    150

    (unstructured)

    5-10

    1

    1

    Evidence-Based Practice

    1500

    250

    5-10

    1

    2

    Performance Improvement

    1500

    250

    5-10

    1

    2

    Program Evaluation

    2500

    250

    5-10

    2

    2

    Qualitative Research

    3500

    250

    ≤30

    3

    3

    Quantitative Research

    3500

    250

    ≤30

    3

    3

    Systematic Review

    4000

    250

    50

    Work with Editor if > 50

    4

    3

    Clinical Practice Guidelines

    4000

    250

    30

    Work with Editor if > 30

    3

    3

    Bibliometric Analysis 4000 250 30 (outside of papers used as part of the bibliometric analyses) 5 4

     

    Submission documents-for SAGE Track: The following documents are required and to be uploaded as separate documents into SAGE Track:

    Cover letter - letter to the editor with title of paper and any comments you want to share about your project. This is a formal letter, single-spaced, no more than 1 page. Include statement similar to the following about author contribution and publication:

    All authors participated in the intellectual content, conception and design of the paper, took public responsibility for it and have agreed to have their name listed as contributors. Neither this manuscript nor parts of it have been previously submitted for publication. None of the authors received any financial interest, direct or indirect, related to the achievement of this work.

    Title page includes - (Do not include this information in the manuscript text document)

    • Title needs to be concise, descriptive, and informative and without a colon.
    • Author full names, credentials (earned academic degrees only), department, and institutional affiliation with physical addresses.
    • Identify the corresponding author with complete contact information.

    Acknowledgements: All contributors who do not meet the criteria for authorship can be listed in an acknowledgement. Acknowledgements that thank subjects or group of non-study related persons or groups will be omitted. Keep acknowledgements to 3 lines.

    Funding: Funding statements are succinct and concise and include specific details of agency and grant numbers if applicable.

    For example: This work was supported by the [name of agency or society] [grant number xxx].

    If there was no funding, this should also be stated.

    This research (project) received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

    Declaration of conflicting interests: If the authors meet the criteria for no conflicting interest, include the statement: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

    Keywords (in SAGE Track you will be asked to choose keywords from a structured keyword index file. The keywords placed on the title page will be used to improve the index file)

    Permissions - Upload any permission granted for copyrighted materials, permission to publish private health information, assents, or consents for photos as supplementary files.

    Abstract - The abstract is placed within a SAGE Track field. Do not include the abstract in the manuscript text document. Word limit is based on manuscript type. Do not use abbreviations or acronyms in the abstract. The only abbreviations accepted are very long descriptors that are cumbersome to repeat, making the understanding clearer. Note that abbreviations need to be internationally known (not just within your field). Do not abbreviate transplant recipients by organ type (KT, LT, OTL, PKT).

    Manuscript text - Each manuscript type requirements are described below. The text with references (and no title page) is uploaded as a separate document.

    Table - Upload each table as a separate document. Provide a table number, title, and legend (if applicable) with each document.

    Figure - Upload each figure as a separate document. Include a separate word document that provides the Figure number, title, and legend (if applicable). Be sure to crop any identifiable characteristics if a photo or X-ray is used.

    Additional resource for structuring manuscripts: Reporting guidelines for health research can be found at https://www.equator-network.org/

    The guidelines provide you with in depth detail in reporting research and are valuable as you begin to structure your manuscripts.

    Manuscript Types and Requirements

    Short Communication: Use headings as appropriate. Topics for short communications include new or upcoming policy or issues in transplantation, short report of new or cutting-edge technology, short description of novel research methodologies, or a comment on article published in journal. A report written similar to an abstract for submission to a research conference will not be accepted. Connect your communication to practice or future research needs.

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Short Communication text including references
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)

    Case Report: A case report is a detailed report of the symptoms, signs, diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up of an individual patient. Case reports may contain a demographic profile of the patient, but usually describe an unusual or novel occurrence. Be wary of disclosing non-relevant personal information. Include consent (and assent if minor). Use the following headings to organize your manuscript.

    INTRODUCTION - Summarize the background and context of the case. Include statement of patient consent.

    PRESENTING CONCERN - Describe the relevant patient characteristics and details of symptoms/concerns/issues addressing the case.

    CLINICAL FINDINGS - Describe pertinent and relevant clinical findings, interventions or therapies.

    OUTCOME - Based on the therapies or patient condition, describe patient outcomes and follow-up.

    DISCUSSION - Summarize case. Include any similar published cases.

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Case Report text including references (no title page)
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)
    • Consent (and assent if case involves a minor)

    Clinical Procurement Practice Issue: Use this manuscript type to describe a clinical procurement practice issue or disease process that will inform readers in more detail about the issue. Use headings and subheadings to structure your clinical issue.

    INTRODUCTION - Describe the scope of the problem or disease process. Include background literature.

    CLINICAL RELEVANCY TO PRACTICE - Describe current practice issues, i.e. barriers and facilitators, organizational challenges

    PRACTICE ISSUES - Focus on issues or topics as you describe how the problem/issue is addressed. The heading may require subheadings to fully organize description.      

    SUMMARY (or Implications for Practice) - Summarize outcomes and describe lessons learned or future suggestions for change.

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Abstract (unstructured)
    • Clinical practice issue text including references (no title page)
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)
    • Permission to use copyright material (if applicable)

    Clinical Transplant Practice Issue: Use this manuscript type to describe a clinical transplant practice issue or disease process that will inform readers in more detail about the issue. This manuscript type is ideal to use for contact hours and may be selected by The Journal to offer credit. Use headings and subheadings to structure your clinical issue.

    INTRODUCTION - Describe the scope of the problem or disease process. Include background literature.

    CLINICAL RELEVANCY TO PRACTICE - Describe current practice issues, i.e. barriers and facilitators, organizational challenges

    PRACTICE ISSUES - Focus on issues or topics as you describe how the problem/issue is addressed. The heading may require subheadings to fully organize description.   

    SUMMARY (or IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE) - Summarize outcomes and describe lessons learned or future suggestions for change.

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Abstract (unstructured)
    • Clinical practice issue text including references (no title page)
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)
    • Permission to use copyright material (if applicable)

    Evidence-Based Practice (EBP): An EBP manuscript describes the exploration of a clinical question where a formal process for searching and evaluating the literature to determine sufficient evidence to change practice or require further research. Use the following headings to organize your manuscript.

    BACKGROUND/SIGNIFICANCE OF THE PROBLEM - Provide adequate summary of the importance of this clinical problem

    CLINICAL QUESTION - State clinical question in a complete sentence in an acceptable format (i.e. PICO, PICOT)

    SEARCH OF THE LITERATURE - Include databases, keywords, inclusion criteria, and yield.

    CLINICAL APPRAISAL - Summarize the findings based on the literature reviewed. This is not a line by line critique of each reviewed article, but a summary of what the research found on your outcome of interest. Include level of evidence.

    INTEGRATION INTO PRACTICE - Description of practice change and measures used to evaluate nursing &/or patient outcomes.

    EVALUATION OF EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE - Provide results of practice change (based on your outcome measures)

    FUTURE AREAS FOR INVESTIGATION - Describe any next steps or how others can use your findings.

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Abstract (structured: Background, Clinical Question, Literature Search, Clinical Appraisal, Integration into Practice, Evaluation)
    • Clinical practice issue text including references (no title page)
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)
    • Permission to use copyright material (if applicable)

    Performance Improvement (PI): Performance improvement, Quality Assurance, or Quality Improvement are common names used in organizations to evaluate progress on meeting local and/or national benchmarks. A PI manuscript describes the systematic evaluation of unit or organizational processes that improved patient, transplant, or organizational outcomes. Please use guidelines for reporting performance improvement 2 and use the following headings to organize your manuscript.

    INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND - Describes the problem, what is known or not known about the problem

    STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM - This can be a simple statement of the problem and identifies the process that your organization (or group) chose to improve.

    METHODS - State the methodology used in the project (i.e. FOCUS PCDA, Lean, Swiss Cheese, Cause & Effect, Root Cause Analysis. Describe the setting, what was planned and implemented and what measures and analyses were used to evaluate success.

    PROCESSES ADDRESSED - Give specific details on the planned changes

    OUTCOMES - Describe results of your process improvement efforts

    IMPLICATIONS - Describe any next steps or how others can use your findings

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Abstract (structured: Background, Problem Statement, Methods, Processes addressed, Outcomes, Implications for practice)
    • Performance improvement text including references (no title page)
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)
    • Permission to use copyright material (if applicable)

    Program Evaluation: As stated by Weiss,3 program evaluations are a way to systematically address a program’s operations or processes to achieve an outcome. The goal would be to determine if what you are doing meets an acceptable outcome or identifies a gap in the preferred outcome. This differs from classical research in that sampling is specific to single center and has many sampling biases so that data are not generalizable to the population at large. Retrospective chart reviews are important, but due to the nature of extracting data from records, control of appropriate documentation and missing data diminish reliability and validity. Program evaluations can be used to guide further research efforts.

    Be sure that your project aim is clear and measurable. This manuscript type has many features similar to quantitative research, including an institutional review. Should authors have questions about which manuscript type to select, contact the Editor. Use the following headings to organize your manuscript.

    INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND - Relevance of the area of interest. Include literature review.

    SPECIFIC AIM - This subheading is optional. It is acceptable to end the introduction with the evaluation purpose. The purpose needs to clear and measurable.

    DESIGN/METHODS

    Design - State the design used. Include institutional or ethic review approval and informed consent statements.

    Setting - Describe the setting where evaluation occurred. This is not the name of the institution but the surroundings where the evaluation took place.

    Population - Describe the population from which you drew your sample. This section is not to describe your sample; it is key for the reader to be able to see whether the sample in the project was representative of the center’s population.

    Sampling - Describe the technique for sampling. Describe inclusion and exclusion criteria.

    Data collection - Describe variables collected. Describe instruments used to measure outcome variables (and psychometric properties), score types, range, interpretation of scores (where applicable). Describe how/where data were obtained. Additional subheadings may be used to help organize your data collection. Organize your variables in the order of your evaluation questions.

    Data analysis - Describe the statistical procedures used to evaluate outcome variables. Organize this in the same order in which you presented your evaluation questions and variables collected. Include strategy for missing data. Include statistical analysis software used. Statistical software does not need to be cited.

    Procedure - For retrospective chart reviews, describe how data were extracted, cleaned, and manipulated before uploading to statistical software.

    RESULTS - Provide results (in the order that you gave in your data collection section). Use additional subheadings to organize outcomes.

    DISCUSSION - Summarize the meaning of your findings (in relation to practice or previous research). Include study strengths and limitations. Future investigative needs (if applicable). Do not restate findings.

    CONCLUSIONS - Final summary of findings.

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Abstract (structured: Introduction, Project Aims or Questions, Design, Results, Conclusion)
    • Quantitative research text including references (no title page)
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)
    • Permission to use copyright material (if applicable)

    Qualitative Research: A manuscript meets this criterion if the methodology used to answer, discover, or describe a concept using formal qualitative methodology. Use the following headings to organize the manuscript.4,5 You may adapt your headings to fit with the type of methodology used.

    INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND - Relevance of the area of interest. Include literature review.

    METHODS/APPROACH - Describe qualitative methods, theoretical framework. Include institutional or ethic review approval.

    Setting - Describe the environment, the subjects, and the role of the researcher.

    Sampling - Describe the technique for sample and how recruitment was carried out. Place the sample in the context of the population (to identify representativeness).

    Information collection - Describe how data were collected, and the method that was use and analysis to evaluate data. Include reliability, credibility, transferability and adequacy of rigor.

    FINDINGS - Provide results (in the order that you gave in your data collection section). Use additional subheadings to organize outcomes.

    DISCUSSION - Summarize the meaning of your findings (in relation to practice or previous research). Include study strengths and limitations. Future investigative needs (if applicable).         

    CONCLUSIONS - Final summary of findings.

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Abstract (structured: Introduction, Methods/Approach, Findings, Conclusion)
    • Qualitative research text including references (no title page)
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)
    • Permission to use copyright material (if applicable)

    Quantitative Research: This is a report of a formal descriptive, comparative, correlational, or interventional research study. Use the following headings to organize your manuscript.

    INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND - Relevance of the area of interest. Include literature review.

    SPECIFIC AIM (or RESEARCH QUESTION(S)) - This subheading is optional. It is acceptable to end the introduction with the study purpose. The study purpose needs to be clear to the reader.

    DESIGN/METHODS

    Design - State the design used. Include institutional or ethical review approval and informed consent statements.

    Setting - Describe the setting where study occurred.

    Population - Describe the population from which you drew your sample. This section is not to describe your sample; it is key for the reader to be able to see whether the sample in the study was representative of the population.

    Sampling - Describe the technique for sampling. Describe inclusion and exclusion criteria. If appropriate describe the recruitment schema.

    Data collection - Describe variables collected. Describe instruments used to measure outcome variables (and psychometric properties), score types, range, interpretation of scores (where applicable). Describe how/where data were obtained. Additional subheadings may be used to help organize your data collection.

    Data analysis - Describe the statistical procedures used to evaluate outcome variables. Organize this in the same order in which you presented your variables collected.

    Procedure - Describe what the research subject was asked to do

    RESULTS - Provide results (in the order that you gave in your data collection section). Use additional subheadings to organize outcomes.

    DISCUSSION - Summarize the meaning of your findings (in relation to practice or previous research). Include study strengths and limitations. Future investigative needs (if applicable). Do not restate your findings.

    CONCLUSIONS - Final summary of findings.

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Abstract (structured: Introduction, Research Questions, Design, Results, Conclusion)
    • Quantitative research text including references (no title page)
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)
    • Permission to use copyright material (if applicable)

    Systematic Review: A systematic review is a summary of published literature on a specific question. This is not a report of each article found, but a way to report findings of outcomes across multiple research studies. A meta-analysis is a way to analyze results over multiple studies although there may be instances in which the data across studies are not feasible to perform the analysis. Use the following headings to organize your manuscript.6,7

    INTRODUCTION - Describe what is currently known and support why the review was undertaken.

    OBJECTIVE - State the objectives and questions the review is to answer.

    METHODS - Design Provide a statement of the design. PRISMA is not a design but a reporting guideline. Describe inclusion/exclusion of research included in the review, describe method of identifying articles and how articles were found. Provide a flow chart of yield that leads to the articles included in the review. Use subheadings as necessary.

                Data collection - Describe

                Bias assessment - Describe method for assessing.

                Outcome measures - Describe summary measures used.

    Synthesis method - If the data are amenable to meta-analysis, refer to the PRISMA statement for direction.

    RESULTS - Describe number of studies screened, characteristics, bias identified, results of studies based on outcome objectives, and synthesis of studies

    DISCUSSION - Summarize, identify strengths and limitations.

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Abstract (Introduction, Objective, Methods, Results, Discussion)
    • Systematic review text including references (no title page)
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)
    • Permission to use copyright material (if applicable)
    • Systematic reviews and meta-analyses will still require permission to publish from the institution.
    • In the reference list, place an asterisk by each article used in the review.

    Clinical Practice Guidelines: Practice guidelines are practice recommendations for patient care based on the latest evidence or in the case of weak or nonexistent evidence, recommendations by experts in the field. The aim is to improve the quality of care by creating a standard for practice. Use the following headings to organize your guideline.

    INTRODUCTION - Define the problem and summary of the need for this practice guideline. This does not need to be extensive; consider limiting this section to 250-300 words.

    AIM - Clearly and concisely state the aim of the guideline.

    DEFINITION OF TERMS - Define any terms that would not be understood outside your specific field.  If all terms are well-known (including internationally), then this subheading can be omitted.

    ASSESSMENT - Identify the population where this guideline applies and what tests, procedures, history, or education needs to be assessed are used.

    MANAGEMENT (TREATMENT OPTIONS) - Describe the recommended practices. This section may have several subheadings. For example, acute management, interventions, maintenance, and/or follow-up.

    SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS - Describe alternatives under specific conditions. For example, restrictions due to acute or chronic disease processes or social determinants.

    COMPANION DOCUMENTS - If there are education materials, assessment forms, or training packages, these can be stated. These materials can be published as supplementary files, if author chooses.

    EVIDENCE TABLE - Include a table of research literature used with the level of evidence. Template examples that can be used: Literature synthesis table or Literature Review Table. The key is to show your readers the key outcome gleaned. The table must be clear and concise.

    REFERENCES - Cite references using AMA, 11th edition.

    Required documents:

    • Cover letter
    • Title page
    • Abstract (Introduction, Aim, Management, Discussion)
    • Clinical Practice Guideline text including references (no title page)
    • Table (if applicable)
    • Figure (if applicable)
    • Permission to use copyright material (if applicable)

    Submit your completed manuscript via SAGE Track. When your manuscript is accepted for publication, the copyright lease form will be sent to the corresponding author.

    Bibliometric Analysis: A manuscript meets this criterion when quantitative data are used to analyze the structural relationships between authors, countries, institutions, or topics. Several types of bibliometric analyses are available, and this must be clearly stated in the design. Use the following headings to organize the manuscript. You may add subheadings to fit with the methodology used.

    INTRODUCTION    Describe what is known and the importance of bibliometric analysis in studying scholarly literature. Provide background information about the field of study and any relevant previous work. 

    SPECIFIC AIM (or RESEARCH QUESTION(S))
    This subheading is optional. It is acceptable to end the introduction with the study purpose. The study purpose/aim/questions need to be clear and measurable.  A reminder that the investigator may have had multiple questions for the data abstracted but not every question asked can be reported in a single manuscript. Be sure that the questions asked are focused and connect to the results. The purpose should be clear and relevant to creating a greater understanding of the topic. 

    DESIGN    State the bibliometric analysis used. Include institutional or ethical review approval. Many institutions do not require a formal institutional review of studies that did not directly involve human subjects. Please provide evidence that the review board exempted the study from further institutional review board oversight or provide a letter from the department head stating that the manuscript/study was reviewed and permission to publish was granted.
        
    DATA COLLECTION 
    Explain the data collection process, including the databases or sources used to obtain the relevant manuscripts or publications. Describe the criteria for selecting the manuscripts for analysis (eg, publication date range, subject area, etc.). Clearly outline the bibliometric indicators or metrics used (eg, citations, co-authorship, h-index, etc.). The number of manuscripts used in the analysis may be extensive, so that the description of the search strategy and articles used in the analyses must be thorough. Describe any data cleaning or preprocessing steps performed on the dataset.

    RESULTS    Present findings in a clear and organized manner, using tables, graphs, or charts to illustrate the data effectively. Present findings in the order of the questions posed in the introduction. The flow diagram of included articles is a required table; beyond the flow diagram, tables are limited to 4, and figures limited to the number of research questions asked. Work with the editor if more than 5 figures are required.

    DISCUSSION    Interpret the results as related to the research questions. Discuss the implications of the findings and their significance in the field. Address any limitations and potential biases in the data.

    CONCLUSION    Summarize the main findings. Emphasize the contributions and how this advances knowledge in the field. Provide suggestions for future research based on the insights gained.

    Rebecca P Winsett PhD
    Editor in Chief
    Progress in Transplantation
    RPWinsett@natco1.org

    REFERENCES

     

    1. JAMA Network Editors. AMA Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors. 11th ed. Oxford University Press; 2020.

    2. Ogrinc G, Mooney SE, Estrada C, et al. The SQUIRE (Standards for QUality Improvment Reporting Excellence)guidelines for quality improvement reporting: Explanation and elaboration. Quality & Safety in Health Care. 2008;17(Suppl 1):i13-i32.

    3. Weiss, CH. Evaluation. 2nd ed. Prentice Hall; 1998.

    4. Rowan M, Huston P. Qualitative research articles: Information for authors and peer reviewers. Canadian Medical Association Journal. 1997;157(10):1442-1446.

    5. Tong A, Sainsbury P, Craig J. Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ): A 32-itme checklist for interveiws and focus groups. International Journal for Quality in Health. 2007;19(6):349-357.

    6. Liberati A, Altman DG, Tetzlaff J, et al. The PRISMA statement for reporting systematic reviews and meta-analyses of studies that evaluate healthcare interventions: Explantation and elaboration. British Medical Journal online. 2009;339:b2700.

    7. Moher D, Liberati A, Tetzlaff J, Altman DG, The PRISMA Group. Preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analyses: The PRISMA statement. International Journal of Surgery. 2010;8(8):336-341.

    AMA Style Guideline for Progress in Transplantation

    “The principle of good writing and good editing are the same: clarity, organization, and style”. Emily Flint, Atlantic Monthly 1996

    The Journal uses AMA Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors 11th edition Oxford University Press.

    Use the Journal’s Guidelines for Authors. Included below are additional tips for using the AMA style. There are many help sheets on the internet but below are a few common tips. This is not an exhaustive guide. The editor expects each author to adhere to AMA guidelines and use additional resources to check each section (abstract, text, reference, tables, and figures) prior to submitting the manuscript.

    • No colons are used in manuscript titles.
    • Use Times New Roman font for body text
    • Use boldface for headers
    • Use italics for non-English words; however, no italics are used for words or phrases that are part of the English language. Italics are not used for emphasis of a word.
    • Use italics for genus and species names in singular form only
    • In enumerations, use italics for lowercase letters and set them in parentheses ((a), (b), (c))
    • Avoid using colons if a sentence is continuous without them
    • Hyphens and dashes are used to link words and clarify the meaning of words and phrases.
    • Hyphenate combination so nouns used as unit modifiers only when they precede nouns (nurse-patient relationship)
    • Hyphenate all prefixes that come before proper nouns, capitalized words, numbers, or abbreviations (post-HIV study)
    • Use double quotation marks when using material from another source. If quoted material is greater than 4 lines of text, offset text in a block; reduce the font size by one (11pt), add space above and below the quoted material. Blocked quotes do not have quotation marks.
    • Single or double quotation marks are not used for word emphasis.
    • Use commas instead of parentheses if the material that is considered parenthetical is closely related to the rest of the text.
    • Do not overuse abbreviations and acronyms, as they can confuse or detract readers.
    • Spell out abbreviations and acronyms upon first use in text, followed by the abbreviation in parentheses.
    • Common abbreviations do not need to be spelled out (Dr, RN, prn, CI)
    • Use the word the in front of an organization unless the acronym is a pronounced word (UNOS, OSHA)
    • Confidence interval can be abbreviated without expansion.
    • Do not abbreviate drug names
    • Do not begin sentences with numbers.
    • Decimals are the only punctuation allowed in numbers
    • Use a leading zero for numbers less than 1; 0.05
    • Four-digit numbers do not have a comma; 6523
    • Use a space for numbers greater than four digits; 652 3000
    • Transplant is a noun and a verb; He received a transplant. He transplanted the organ.
    • Transplantation is a procedure; Organ transplantation is a field of medicine.
    • Do not use transplantation as a verb
    • Just a word about better
      • Better is an adjective that modifies a noun; i.e. better weather
      • Do not use it to modify a verb; i.e. better informed (wrong usage)
    • The abbreviation for United States—US—may be used when it precedes the word it modifies; US mail, but spelled out in other contexts
    • Canadian city names are followed by the province name. Province is never abbreviated.

    Sheahan, K. AMA Style Guide. Boca Raton FL: Barcharts, Inc; 2022.

    Author Submission Checklist

    Final review before you hit the Submit button!

    All parts of manuscript are uploaded as separate files.

    1. Title page
      1. No colon or dashes in title
      2. All authors with academic credentials and institution affiliation
      3. Corresponding author matches corresponding author chosen in SAGE Track
      4. Acknowledgements, if applicable
      5. Include funding statement
      6. Declaration of conflicting interest statement
      7. Key words (3-5)
    2. The abstract is uploaded into SAGE Track and is not in the manuscript text.
      1. No abbreviations in abstract.
      2. There are exceptions to the abbreviation rule, but these are very few.
      3. Use appropriate headings for abstract based on manuscript type.
    3. Manuscript text. The text includes the references.
      1. No reference to individuals or institutions to ensure blinded review.
      2. IRB statement is included.
      3. Manuscript has the suggested headings for the manuscript type selected.
      4. References are in order of citation and follow AMA style guidelines.
        1. Remember the ideal number of references cited over 5 years is 20%. Be sure that you have used the most recent literature and are near the ideal.
      5. Do not use line numbering or justified margins.
    4. Table 1 (each Table is uploaded separately)
    5. Table 2, etc
    6. Figure 1 (each Figure is uploaded separately)
      1. All figures in black and white? Color graphs may be submitted. Submit color graphs as separate documents and labelled as color.
      2. The graph needs to be in an editable form.
    7. Figure 2, etc
    8. Supplementary files, if applicable (each file is uploaded separately)
      1. Supplementary material is to be stated in text, but only available in online version.
      2. Supplementary files can be in color.
      3. Production does not copyedit supplementary files so be sure that files are in final form and ready for uploading.
      4. Limit supplementary files to 1 or 2.

    Revised November 2023

    Individual Subscription, Combined (Print & E-access)


    Institutional Subscription, E-access


    Institutional Backfile Purchase, E-access (Content through 1998)


    Institutional Subscription & Backfile Lease, E-access Plus Backfile (All Online Content)


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    Institutional Subscription, Combined (Print & E-access)


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