Submission Conditions of Acceptance

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission’s compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines:

  1. The submission has not been previously published, nor is it pending peer review or publication with another journal. If there are any conflicts, an explanation box is provided in Comments to the Editor at the end of this page.
  2. The submission does not infringe any copyright, nor violate any proprietary rights, nor contain any libelous matter, nor invade the privacy of any person or third party.
  3. The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines. The authors understand that failure to adhere to these submission guidelines will delay the peer review process.
  4. If submitting to a peer-reviewed section of the journal, the instructions in Ensuring a Blind Review have been followed. The authors understand that failure to adhere to these guidelines will delay the peer review process.

Conditions of Acceptance 1

When a paper is accepted for publication, it is understood that the author agrees to pay the indicated article processing fee, unless granted a discount. There is never a fee to submit.

If the article processing fee is not paid, the manuscript will not be published in any medium by the Western Journal of Emergency Medicine or Clinical Practice and Cases in Emergency Medicine. Please go to http://westjem.com/article-processing-fee for the list of current article processing fees and for a complete list of circumstances by which the fee could be discounted or waived. These circumstances are all based on the first author listed for the manuscript.

For more information on article processing fees for Case Reports and Images for the Clinical Practice and Cases in Emergency Medicine, please visit http://westjem.com/cpc-em-article-processing-fee. For original research, brief research report, reviews, and all others in the Western Journal of Emergency Medicine, please visit http://westjem.com/article-processing-fee.

Conditions of Acceptance 2

Authors accept that all Case Reports or Images in Emergency Medicine that are accepted will be published in Clinical Practice and Cases in Emergency Medicine, a journal in affiliation with the Western Journal of Emergency Medicine: Integrating Emergency Care with Population Health.

Conditions of Acceptance 3

The authors agree to provide informed consent documents with the submission for any patient photographs, if any. The manuscript will not be accepted or printed without all appropriate consent documents.

Conditions of Acceptance 4

Institutional Review Board approval was obtained and must be noted the Methods section of the manuscript.

Any clinical trial that involves human subjects and health outcomes must have been registered with ClinicalTrials.gov. This must be noted in the Methods section. The identification number must be listed in the cover page with a short description.

Conditions of Acceptance 5

Authors agree to disclose all affiliations, funding sources, and financial or management relationships that could be perceived as potential sources of bias. This MUST be clearly noted in the acknowledgement section of the manuscript.

July 21, 2015

Contact Information

WestJEM/ Department of Emergency Medicine
UC Irvine Health

3800 W Chapman Ave Ste 3200
Orange, CA 92868, USA
Phone: 1-714-456-6389
Email: editor@westjem.org

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WestJEM
ISSN: 1936-900X
e-ISSN: 1936-9018

CPC-EM
ISSN: 2474-252X

Our Philosophy

Emergency Medicine is a specialty which closely reflects societal challenges and consequences of public policy decisions. The emergency department specifically deals with social injustice, health and economic disparities, violence, substance abuse, and disaster preparedness and response. This journal focuses on how emergency care affects the health of the community and population, and conversely, how these societal challenges affect the composition of the patient population who seek care in the emergency department. The development of better systems to provide emergency care, including technology solutions, is critical to enhancing population health.