I
nstructIons
for
A
uthors
dite manuscript consideration and help ensure that the
manuscript is presented to reviewers in a format that the
author has seen before submission. However, the PDF is
supplemental and cannot be submitted solely as a substi-
tute for the required Word and image files.
MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION
AUTHOR RESPONSIBILITY
One author should be designated as corresponding
author, and his or her address, e-mail address, and tele-
phone and fax numbers should be provided. The cor-
responding author will receive proofs for approval. Au-
thors are responsible for the accuracy of all statements in
their work, including changes made by the editors.
TRANSMITTAL STATEMENTS
The manuscript transmittal statement form, which
may be reproduced, is designed to simplify and con-
solidate the authors' statements routinely required by
all publishers. A PDF version of the form is available
on the Journal's web site (www.osli.com/PDFs/OSLI-
copyright.pdf). It should be read, signed and dated in
all sections by
all authors, and be included at the time
of submission of the manuscript. Signing and submit-
ting this form is required before the manuscript can be
reviewed, and indicates that the authors are aware of
and agree to the details regarding assignment of copy-
right, financial disclosure, and authorship responsibil-
ity described in the form.
PERMISSIONS
Authors must inform SLACK Incorporated if tables,
photos, or illustrations have been previously published.
Material reprinted from other publications (including
electronic media) must be accompanied by a letter of
permission from the publisher, which extends non-ex-
clusive worldwide rights to reprint the material for all
forms of media now or hereafter developed to SLACK
Incorporated. A letter of consent to use photographs of
patients in which a likelihood of identification exists
must be obtained. Letters of permission or consent must
be scanned and submitted with the manuscript.
FORMATTING OF THE MANUSCRIPT
The Journal follows the style guidelines delineated
in the American Medical Association's Manual of Style,
9th ed. (1998). It is recommended that authors print
out and examine the manuscript text and all tables and
figures from the electronic files to be submitted, and
keep that printed copy as an original in the author's
possession. The specific instructions for the various cat-
egories of manuscripts should be followed just as if the
author were preparing hard copy.
Manuscripts should be double spaced with one-inch
margins, and pages should be numbered consecutively,
beginning with the title page. One e-file should include
the entire text of the manuscript, including the following
components, each of which should begin on a new page.
Title Page
The title page should include
· complete article title;
· first name, middle initial, and last name of all authors,
with their highest academic degrees, the institution(s) at
which the work was done, as well as the affiliations of all
authors clearly indicated, using authors' initials, and in-
cluding the city and state of all institutions;
· name, complete mailing address, e-mail address,
telephone number, and fax number for reprint requests
and any other correspondence;
· acknowledgment of grant support, research fund-
ing, and any proprietary interest;
· date of submission of the manuscript and, if the
manuscript was presented at a meeting, the name of
the organization, meeting location, and date on which
it was read.
For Clinical Science and Experimental Science
Abstract. Provide a structured abstract (150 words
maximum) in which the following sections are delin-
eated:
Background and Objective: Gives brief overview
of the topic and in this context states the main objec-
tive of the study.
Study Design/Materials and Methods: Describes
the basic design, subjects, and scientific methods (for
clinical science, section title is Study Design/Patients
and Methods).
Results: Gives main results of the study including
confidence intervals and exact level of statistical signifi-
cance.
Conclusion: States only those conclusions sup-
ported by the data obtained, and, whenever appropri-
ate, the direct clinical implication of the findings (avoid
speculation).