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Concise Academic Writing

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Title: Concise Academic Writing


1
Concise Academic Writing
  • Mark I. Langdorf, MD, MHPE, FACEP, FAAEM,
    RDMSProfessor and ChairUniversity of
    California, IrvineEditor, Western Journal of
    Emergency Medicine

2
Choosing a target journal
  • 35 general and subspecialty journals in EM
  • 11 indexed in Medline (National Library of
    Medicine)
  • most established and prestigious
  • most discriminating
  • Rough order most discriminating to least are
  • Most Annals, Academic
  • Middle tier Journal of, American Journal of,
    Canadian Journal of, European Journal of, Journal
    of Accident and EM, EM Journal (formerly Journal
    of Accident and EM)
  • Lower tier Internal and EM (Italy), EM
    Australasia (formerly EM), Journal of Trauma
    Injury, Infection and Critical Care

3
20 Non-Medline EM Journals
  • Author pays for publication BMC Emergency
    Medicine (1860 if accepted) World Journal of
    Emergency Surgery (1665)
  • Brand new (2007-08) Western Journal of
    EM International Journal of EM
  • Electronic only Internet Journal of EM

4
EM Subspecialty Journals
  • Pediatrics Pediatric Emergency Care Clinical
    Pediatric Emergency Medicine
  • Disaster Medicine Disaster Medicine Disaster
    Management and Response (for nursing)
  • Emergency Medical Services Journal of
    EMS Emergency Medical Services Prehospital
    Emergency Care
  • ED Management ED Management Emergency Health
    Services Quarterly Emergency Health Services
    Review

5
EM Subspecialty Journals
  • Emergency Nursing Journal of Emergency
    Nursing Emergency Nurse
  • Accident and Emergency Nursing
  • Emergency Radiology
  • Emergency Surgery Journal of Trauma Injury
    Infection and Critical Care Turkish Journal of
    Trauma and Emergency Surgery
  • Reviews Topics in Emergency Medicine Emergency
    Medicine Clinics of North America
  • Emergency psychiatry
  • International Journal of Emergency Mental Health
  • Injury prevention Traffic Injury Prevention

6
Aims and Scope
  • Go to website. Does it fit your paper?
  • First/resident projects rarely make top tier
    journals
  • Take advice from mentor
  • Review process 2-4 months
  • Very useful but painful review

7
Throwaway Journals
  • Sent without subscription or society membership
  • Authors are paid to write
  • Not considered academic
  • Not or loosely peer-reviewed
  • Not evaluated for accuracy or completeness
  • Classic example Emergency Medicine (magazine)
  • Looks like you could throw it away when youre
    done

8
Writing Tips
  • Write with a partner/collaborator
  • Youll keep each other on track
  • Three-hour blocks minimumstay in the zone
  • Use the draft of the paper as a notepad
  • When to start next time
  • What new references you need
  • What new statistical analysis you need
  • Put brief citations at end of sentences
  • Assemble final reference list at the end
  • Use Endnote or similar
  • Automatically reformats references to conform to
    new journal

9
Emergency Medicine Conventions
  • Emergency physician (EP)
  • Emergency department (ED)
  • Emergency medicine (EM)
  • Not emergency room physician, emergency room,
    emergency medicine physician, ER physician, EM
    physician or even ED physician
  • First time use spell them out, and then, in
    parentheses, abbreviate
  • Then use abbreviation throughout paper
  • Except for tables and figures
  • Abstract stands alone

10
Rules of the Road
  • Be brief!
  • Journal editor wants as much content in as few
    pages as possible
  • Strunk and White, 1918, The Elements of Style
  • Vigorous writing is concise. A sentence should
    contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no
    unnecessary sentences, for the same reason that a
    drawing should have no unnecessary lines and a
    machine no unnecessary parts. This requires not
    that the writer make all his sentences short, or
    that he avoid all detail and treat his subjects
    only in outline, but that every word tell.

11
The Structure of DNAWatson and Crick, Nature,
1953
12
How to Get Your Paper Reviewed
  • Follow the instructions to authors completely.
  • Follow the instructions to authors completely.
  • Follow the instructions to authors completely.
  • Follow the instructions to authors completely.
  • Follow the instructions to authors completely.
  • Get the picture?

13
Other Tips and Requirements
  • Avoid complicated medical terms and jargon
  • Not, juxtaposed, but adjacent or even next
    to.
  • Use medical terms only when the appropriate lay
    term is not precise enough.
  • Expect active voice almost all the time.
  • Use the template to include all vital elements
  • Avoid using the same word twice in a sentence

14
Other Tips and Requirements
  • Avoid redundant hyperbole
  • extremely arachnophobic,
  • close proximity
  • summarize briefly
  • very deep
  • overcrowded
  • very precarious
  • Vary sentence length
  • Avoid run-on sentences
  • Use no more than one parenthetical phrase per
    sentence
  • Alternate short sentences with long ones.

15
Rules of the Road
  • Paragraphs need to have at least three sentences
  • a topic
  • an explanation
  • some sort of conclusion.
  • If there are only two, incorporate this thought
    into the paragraph before.
  • Paragraphs should not generally have more than
    six sentences.

16
Rules of the Road
  • Someone not in EM, or not even in medicine,
    should understand the paper.
  • A college graduate should be able to understand
    much of medical writing
  • If they would be lost, the paper needs more work
  • Goal is to NOT write in a language called
    medicine, but rather in English

17
Rules of the Road
  • Avoid politics in the paper
  • Little room for opinion in a scientific paper
  • Facts speak for themselves
  • Discussion section Allow the author to opine a
    bit, for maybe 2-3 sentences, if at all
  • Assure such opinions, are clearly marked, such
    as, we believe.
  • If the concept is provocative, it probably
    doesnt belong in a research paper.

18
Reviewing Papers
  • Helps gain experience in academic writing
  • Flips your perspective from author to consumer
  • Provides insight into common problems and
    mistakes
  • Time consuming good review two hours
  • Will dramatically improve the quality of the
    journal
  • Ultimate Medline indexing depends on this

19
Sitting Down to Write the Paper
  • Use template from UC San Diego Emergency Medicine
    Residency included in your syllabus

20
The Title
  • Answer the question posed by the paper in the
    title
  • Type of study belongs in the title
    retrospective, randomized controlled trial,
    cohort study, before and after, case report, case
    series
  • 120 character limit for WestJEM
  • Strike balance between brevity and accuracy
  • Spell out all abbreviations.

21
Structured Abstract
  • Introduction two sentences max
  • Objective one sentence
  • Methods 2-3 sentences
  • Results as many as you have, but major only
  • Conclusion one sentence
  • Parallel the rest of the paper in content and
    order
  • Limit for WestJEM 300 words
  • Normally, abstract written first, then paper
  • Must assure consistency with body of the paper

22
Internal Consistency
  • Sample size, numbers, results
  • Make sure these are the same in Abstract, Methods
    and Results
  • Nothing brands a paper as amateurish than
    inconsistencies
  • Casts doubt in the reviewers mind
  • What else is wrong if they cant even get this
    right?

23
Introduction
  • Typically four paragraphs
  • Not a literature review
  • Cite references in the introduction that set
    stage for the problem or hypothesis
  • All other citations belong in the discussion
    (except methods description from previous work)
  • Last sentence
  • We hypothesized.
  • Our objective was.
  • We sought to.

24
Methods
  • Describe setting
  • How inclusive was the sample
  • Specific inclusion/exclusion criteria
  • What was the intervention?
  • How were subjects identified?
  • How was data gathered and recorded?
  • How was it analyzed?
  • What tests?
  • Have statistician or senior mentor write or
    review
  • What computer program, version, manufacturer,
    corporate headquarters.
  • Make and model of all equipment
  • Goal of methods is to enable replication

25
Methods Retrospective Chart Review
  • Adhere to seven elements of methods described in
    Gilbert and Lowenstein, Annals Emerg Med, 1996,
    or
  • Worster and Bledsoe, Ann Emerg Med.
    200545448-451 with 12 criteria for a proper
    methods section

26
Worster and Bledsoe
27
Results
  • Present primary outcome measure first, followed
    by secondary
  • Graphs easily visible in black and white, with
    different patterns, not colors
  • For more than 4-5 related results, use table
  • Tables are easier to digest
  • Dont repeat results from a table in text
  • Instead refer to general synopsis of the tabular
    results

28
Results Statistical and Reporting Conventions
  • All results in absolute not relative terms
  • The absolute risk reduction from a mortality of
    4 to 2 was 2, rather than, The relative risk
    reduction was 50.
  • Relative changes inflate the magnitude of the
    effect artificially.
  • To compare two groups, use p values with 95
    confidence intervals AND calculate NNT/NNH from
    the absolute difference in outcomes
  • Gives information to gauge clinical import

29
Results Diagnostic Tests
  • Use likelihood ratios in addition to sensitivity,
    specificity, and positive/negative predictive
    values
  • Allows reader to change probability of a given
    condition after the diagnostic test
  • Pre-test probability modified by likelihood ratio
    post-test probability by the Fagan nomogram

30
Pulmonary Embolism and d-Dimer
Sensitivity 91 Specificity 42 LR Pos
(30/33) / (42/72) 1.5 LR Neg (3/33) / (30/72)
0.22
Heit JA, et al. Arch Path Lab Med.
1999123235-240
31
Plain Language
  • A negative d-dimer is 0.22 times as likely to
    occur in patients with PE than in patients
    without PE
  • A negative d-Dimer is 4 ½ times less likely to
    occur in patients with PE than in patients
    without PE

32
Fagan Nomogram
33
Figures
  • Even if it seems obvious, annotate figures and
    pictures with arrows (point to the brain
    hemorrhage or appendicitis)
  • High resolution, at least 300 dpi
  • Low resolution images pixel out.

34
Legends for Tables and Figures
  • Tables and Figures with their legends are
    separate pages, not imbedded in text of paper
  • Must stand alone and be very descriptive
  • Must spell out all abbreviations used each time
  • Must be large and clear (little white space)
  • Make sure they are numbered in proper order

35
Discussion
  • Most important findings first
  • Same order as results section
  • Then secondary outcome measures
  • This is the place for opinion, though quite
    limited
  • How could or should this change clinical care?
  • Discussions should be limited to 5-6 items, each
    with one to two paragraphs

36
Conclusions
  • Dont allow overstatement
  • Definitive study is almost impossible
  • Insist on words such as, it appears, or from
    these data.
  • Always call for further investigation
  • Retrospective studies cannot show causation, only
    association
  • Make conclusion specific enough to stand alone.
    Include, in adults, or in emergency department
    patients with a chief complaint of chest pain.

37
Limitations
  • Limit to 1-2 paragraphs
  • Should acknowledge
  • Small sample size/underpowered study
  • Incomplete patient enrollment
  • Lost to follow up
  • Retrospective design
  • Lack of blinding
  • Lack of generalizability
  • Author should be honest about shortcomings and
    biases, or appears naïve

38
References
  • Consistent format, adherent to journal
    requirements
  • Citations go at end of sentence, unless sentence
    compound and citation applies only to first part
  • Need to be up to date look at most recent
    reference
  • Lit review from two years ago is out of date
  • Suggest new references as your expertise dictates

39
Responding to the First Critique
  • Expect the paper to be rejected
  • Only 5 of papers are accepted without revision
  • You will get pissed
  • The reviewer will ask you to do things you cant
    fix
  • At first reading, you wont understand how the
    reviewer could possibly have misunderstood or
    been confused by your paper
  • Put the paper down for three days to let your
    anger subside.

40
Rewriting the Paper
  • Editor must see you took the review seriously
  • Even if rejected outright, respond to critiques
    completely before sending to new journal
  • If first reviewers were confused
  • Use constructive tone to respond to same journal.
    Dont be defensive.
  • Respond within one month
  • Familiarity with the paper will increase chances
    of acceptance
  • Author to upload point by point response to
    review under supplemental content.

41
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