Author Guideline

General requirements

  • Before the article is published, author statement form should be submitted online which includes originality, not in process or published elsewhere, author agreements, no conflict of interest, transfer of copyright rights, the protocol for the research project has been approved by suitably constituted research ethics committee of the institution within the work was undertaken.
  • The first author must ensure that all co-authors have read and agreed to the contents of the manuscript to be published.
  • The manuscript is typed in times new roman, font size 12pts, single space, on A4-sized paper, a minimum of 10 pages and a maximum of 14 pages. The manuscript is typed on single side or single column and each page is numbered starting from the title page. Titles and abstracts are written in both Indonesian and English.

EXPLANATION FOR RESEARCH ARTICLES

Title
The title is written in both Indonesian and English. The title must reflect the results, should be written in no more than 15 words in capital letters. The title must not contain any abbreviation, except for familiar and common terminology. Written in Time New Roman 14pt bold for English title and written in Time New Roman 14pt bold italic for title in Bahasa.

Authors
All author names must be written in complete name without title and abbreviation. The author's name is listed at a maximum of 5 (five) people. In case of more authors, using ‘et al’ is deemed adequate. The author's name must be accompanied by the name of the working institution, affiliated institution and address (Department, Institution and Official Address, written with Time New Roman 12pt) all written in full (not abbreviation). The main author is recommended to provide the e-mail address to facilitate communication.

Abstract
The manuscript should contain an abstract within 250 words. The manuscript should have a self-contained, citation-free abstract and state briefly the purpose of the research, methodology, results and conclusions. Abstract should be in a single paragraph with running sentences. Do not use any subheading or point list within the abstract. Also, non-standard or uncommon abbreviations should be avoided, the citations should not appeared in the abstract.

Keywords.
Consists of 3-5 words that can help the preparation of the index,  separated by semicolon (;), write in alphabetical order.

Introduction
Introduction contains justification of the importance of the study conducted. The introduction should contain the brief idea of work, problem statement, and Authors contribution towards their research. Sufficient recent reference citation from last 10 years should be included to illustrate the existing challenges and importance of current work. This section should be succinct, with no subheadings unless unavoidable. State the objectives of the work and provide an adequate background related to the current work. The last paragraph must indicate the methods used and the purpose or hypothesis of the study. Reference writing uses Vancouver style with super script number. 1

Method
This section should contain sufficient detail to reproduce reported data. It can be divided into subsections if several methods are described. Methods already published should be indicated by a reference.2 only relevant modifications should be described. Methodology should be written concisely in detail by maintaining continuity of the texts. Methods elaborate materials and tools used (if stated), contain detailed steps for conducting research and explain the method of data collection and analysis in a narrative form. In more detail, method should contain the design, the size, criteria and method of sampling, instruments used, and procedures of collecting, processing, and analysis of the data. When using a questionnaire as instrument, explain the contents briefly and to measure which variables. Validity and reliability of instruments should also be explained. In the experimental or intervention studies need to be explained interventional procedure or treatment is given. Analysis of data using computer programs needs not be written details of the software if not original. Place or location of the study is only mentioned when it comes to study. The methods section written brief in two to three paragraphs. Research using human and animal subjects must state that the study has received approval from the health research ethics committee.

Result
The Result section presents the data and its interpretation. Research data can be presented in the form of tables/figures/graphs. After the subtitles 'Result' must begin with an introductory sentence before the table/picture/graph. Table descriptions do not repeat data in tables or figures. The findings are sorted by the objectives of the study or the research hypothesis. The results do not display the same data in two forms namely tables/ images /graphics and narration. No citations in the results section. The average value (mean) must be accompanied by a standard deviation.

Table format

Table should be formatted as the following example.

Table 1. Table title

Figure

All figures should be placed in the body text of the paper in a consecutive order. Figures should be used in the format of JPEG, PNG, TIFF, etc. with 300 dpi resolution at least. Figure 1 shows the logo of jite journal.

                                                  Figure 1. Journal picture.

Discussion
It is an academic review by comparing the data obtained in the previous studies by other researchers in the same field. The discussion must be related to the problem stated in the background, and directed at an answer to the research hypothesis. No more statistical or other mathematical symbols in the discussion. Emphasis was placed on similarities, differences, or the uniqueness of the findings obtained. It is need to discuss the reason of the findings. Thus, the discussion must be supported by adequate and up to date references. The implications of the results are written to clarify the impact of the results the advancement of science are studied. The discussion ended with the various limitations of the study.
In the case report manuscript, discussion is the most important part of the case report. The discussion serves to summarize and interpret the main findings of the case report, to compare case reports with what is already known in the literature and show their uniqueness, to gain new knowledge and application to practice, and to draw conclusions that are clinically useful. In comparing new cases with prior knowledge, the author must briefly summarize the published literature and show in what aspects this case is different from what was previously published, and thus is worth reading and publishing. The discussion section of the case report is not designed to provide a comprehensive literature review and citation of all references; therefore, all references cited must be critically evaluated. Each case boundary must be explained. The added value of the cases presented must be disclosed, as well as lessons that can be learned from the cases presented, especially if there are new recommendations for patient or management diagnosis, can be suggested. In the last paragraph, the author must present the main results of the case report based on the evidence reviewed in the discussion section. A brief statement of the lessons learned from this case can be expressed through evidence-based recommendations.

Conclusion
Conclusion should be written in continuous manner with running sentences which normally includes main outcome of the research work. The conclusion is the answer of the hypothesis that leads to the main purpose of the study. Its implication, limitation and recommendation. Avoid using subheading, citation, or references.

Acknowledgement
Acknowledgement (if any) may include peoples or organization who contributed to the work in the manuscript but not listed in the author list.

Conflict of interest
The author must reveal 'All potential conflicts of interest' here. This includes all financial and non-financial interests and relationships, employment (whether full or part time), and services in the private sector and nonprofit boards and advisory panels, whether paid or unpaid. The author must also disclose any conflicts of interest that might have affected the behavior or presentation of the study, including but not limited to close relations with those who might be injured due to publicity, academic interests and competition, and personal, religious or political beliefs relevant to the topic discussed.

References

All references should be cited correctly within the text; avoid adding only list of references without citation. The accuracy of reference data is the responsibility of the author. Cite references in numeric order according to the first mention in the text and write them according to the Vancouver rules. Include the name of the authors with a maximum of 6 authors.  If there are more than six authors, write the names of the first six authors and then add “et al”. The number of references should exceed 15 with all of them dated from the past 10 years. Only 20 percent of the references should come from textbooks with the rest comes from journals. References from articles that have been received and awaiting publication in a particular magazine should be written as “in press”. (The following references are used for an example purpose only)

  1. Jacobs DS, DeMott WR, Finley PR, Kasten BL, Tilzer LL, et al. Laboratory test handbook. 3rd Hudson: Lexi-Comp Inc, 2021.
  2. Paterson PY. Infection in the compromised host. In: Youmans GP, Paterson PY, Herbert M, Eds. The biologic and clinical basis of infectious diseases. 3rd ed. Philadelpia London Toronto: W.B. Saunders Company, 2020: 502-9

EXPLANATION FOR CASE REPORTS ARTICLES

Title
The title is written in both Indonesian and English. The title must reflect the case reports, should be written in no more than 15 words in capital letters. The title must not contain any abbreviation, except for familiar and common terminology. Written in Time New Roman 14pt bold for English title and written in Time New Roman 14pt bold italic for title in Bahasa.

You do not need to include “a case report” in the title – you may be cryptic if you wish

Authors

All author names must be written in complete name without title and abbreviation. The author's name is listed at a maximum of 5 (five) people. In case of more authors, using ‘et al’ is deemed adequate. The author's name must be accompanied by the name of the working institution, affiliated institution and address (Department, Institution and Official Address, written with Time New Roman 12pt) all written in full (not abbreviation). The main author is recommended to provide the e-mail address to facilitate communication.

Abstract

The manuscript should contain an abstract within 250 words. The manuscript should have a self-contained, citation-free abstract and state briefly the background of case reports, case report presentation, discussion, and conclusions. Abstract should be in a single paragraph with running sentences. Do not use any subheading or point list within the abstract. Also, non-standard or uncommon abbreviations should be avoided, the citations should not appeared in the abstract.

Keywords.
Consists of 3-5 words that can help the preparation of the index, separated by semicolon (;), write in alphabetical order

Introduction
Introduction contains justification of the importance of the case reports. The introduction should contain the brief idea. Why you think this case is important – why did you write it up? • Why is the case of interest to our readers? • Is this a prevalent health problem? • Is there a clear message? Reference writing uses Vancouver style with super script number. 1

Case Reports

Presenting features, medical/social/family history. This is the patient’s story – but please be sensitive to patient confidentiality. • How did they present? • What is the relevant history? Why is this relevant? • Explain your findings and how they influenced your decisions Do not use abbreviations for diseases or investigations. Investigations If relevant. All investigations that create a background (baseline) picture are relevant. All investigations that are crucial to management decisions should be discussed in full. Chose appropriate images and videos to illustrate your point (maintaining patient confidentiality. Differential diagnosis If relevant. Please don’t list these. What we want to see is how the final diagnosis is teased out. What are the consequences to management or treatment for the differential diagnoses? Discuss these and the pitfalls that may ensue. Treatment If relevant. Include pharmacological and nonpharmacological, eg, surgery, physiotherapy, supportive care. Outcome and follow-up Always include follow up data where you can; it gives readers a clear understanding of outcome. The follow-up period should be defined. Please state if the patient has died even if not directly related to your case.

Table format

Table should be formatted as the following example.

Table 1. Table title

Figure

All figures should be placed in the body text of the paper in a consecutive order. Figures should be used in the format of JPEG, PNG, TIFF, etc. with 300 dpi resolution at least. Figure 1 shows the logo of jite journal.

                                                                         Figure 1. Journal picture.

Discussion

It is an academic review by comparing the data obtained in the previous studies by other researchers in the same field. Include a very brief review of similar published cases. This is the opportunity to describe mechanisms of injury, guidelines and their relevance, diagnostic pathways (use diagrams if you like) and the points of interest of the case. A brief summary of relevant clinical guidelines is appropriate. • Did you have to make an exception? • Did you have to adapt the guidelines?

Conclusion

Conclusion should be written in continuous manner with running sentences which normally includes main outcome of case reports. Its implication, limitation and recommendation. Avoid using subheading, citation, or references.

Acknowledgement

Acknowledgement (if any) may include peoples or organization who contributed to the work in the manuscript but not listed in the author list.

Conflict of Interest

The author must reveal 'All potential conflicts of interest' here. This includes all financial and non-financial interests and relationships, employment (whether full or part time), and services in the private sector and nonprofit boards and advisory panels, whether paid or unpaid. The author must also disclose any conflicts of interest that might have affected the behaviour or presentation of the study, including but not limited to close relations with those who might be injured due to publicity, academic interests and competition, and personal, religious or political beliefs relevant to the topic discussed.

References

All references should be cited correctly within the text; avoid adding only list of references without citation. The accuracy of reference data is the responsibility of the author. Cite references

in numeric order according to the first mention in the text and write them according to the Vancouver rules. Include the name of the authors with a maximum of 6 authors.  If there are more than six authors, write the names of the first six authors and then add “et al”. The number of references should exceed 15 with all of them dated from the past 10 years. Only 20 percent of the references should come from textbooks with the rest comes from journals. References from articles that have been received and awaiting publication in a particular magazine should be written as “in press”. (The following references are used for an example purpose only)

  1. Jacobs DS, DeMott WR, Finley PR, Kasten BL, Tilzer LL, et al. Laboratory test handbook. 3rd Hudson: Lexi-Comp Inc, 2021.
  2. Paterson PY. Infection in the compromised host. In: Youmans GP, Paterson PY, Herbert M, Eds. The biologic and clinical basis of infectious diseases. 3rd Philadelpia London Toronto: W.B. Saunders Company, 2020: 502-9.

EXPLANATION FOR LITERATURE REVIEW ARTICLES

Title

The title is written in both Indonesian and English. The title must reflect the systematic literature review, should be written in no more than 15 words in capital letters. The title must not contain any abbreviation, except for familiar and common terminology. Written in Time New Roman 14pt bold for English title and written in Time New Roman 14pt bold italic for title in Bahasa.

You do not need to include “literature review” in the title – you may be cryptic if you wish

Authors

All author names must be written in complete name without title and abbreviation. The author's name is listed at a maximum of 5 (five) people. In case of more authors, using ‘et al’ is deemed adequate. The author's name must be accompanied by the name of the working institution, affiliated institution and address (Department, Institution and Official Address, written with Time New Roman 12pt) all written in full (not abbreviation). The main author is recommended to provide the e-mail address to facilitate communication.

Abstract

The manuscript should contain an abstract within 250 words. The manuscript should have a self-contained, citation-free abstract and state briefly. Provide a structured summary including, as applicable: background; objectives; data sources; study eligibility criteria, participants, and interventions; study appraisal and synthesis methods; results; limitations; conclusions sentences. Do not use any subheading or point list within the abstract. Also, non-standard or uncommon abbreviations should be avoided, the citations should not appeared in the abstract.

Keywords.

Consists of 3-5 words that can help the preparation of the index, separated by semicolon (;), write in alphabetical order.
 
Introduction

Introduction contains justification of the importance of the literature review Describe the rationale for the review in the context of what is already known. Provide an explicit statement of questions being addressed with reference to participants, interventions, comparisons, outcomes, and study design (PICOS). Reference writing uses Vancouver style with super script number. 1

Method

Describe all information sources (e.g., databases with dates of coverage, contact with study authors to identify additional studies) in the search and date last searched.

State the process for selecting studies (i.e., screening, eligibility, included in systematic review, and, if applicable, included in the meta-analysis).

Describe method of data extraction from reports (e.g., piloted forms, independently, in duplicate) and any processes for obtaining and confirming data from investigators.

Result

Study selection: Give numbers of studies screened, assessed for eligibility, and included in the review, with reasons for exclusions at each stage, ideally with a flow diagram. For each study, present characteristics for which data were extracted (e.g., study size, PICOS, follow-up period) and provide the citations.

Reports of systematic reviews and meta-analyses should include a completed PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses)

Presenting interpretation of analysis results from literatures, drafting manuscript, critically analysing.

Table format

Table should be formatted as the following example.

Table 1. Table title

Figure

All figures should be placed in the body text of the paper in a consecutive order. Figures should be used in the format of JPEG, PNG, TIFF, etc. with 300 dpi resolution at least. Figure 1 shows the logo of jite journal.

                                                                          Figure 1. Journal picture.

Discussion
Summarize the main findings including the strength of evidence for each main outcome; consider their relevance to key groups (e.g., healthcare providers, users, and policy makers).

Discuss limitations at study and outcome level (e.g., risk of bias), and at review-level (e.g., incomplete retrieval of identified research, reporting bias).

Conclusion

Conclusion should be written in continuous manner with running sentences which normally Provide a general interpretation of the results in the context of other evidence, and implications for future research. Avoid using subheading, citation, or references.

Acknowledgement

Acknowledgement (if any) may include peoples or organization who contributed to the work in the manuscript but not listed in the author list.

Conflict of Interest

The author must reveal 'All potential conflicts of interest' here. This includes all financial and non-financial interests and relationships, employment (whether full or part time), and services in the private sector and nonprofit boards and advisory panels, whether paid or unpaid. The author must also disclose any conflicts of interest that might have affected the behaviour or presentation of the study, including but not limited to close relations with those who might be injured due to publicity, academic interests and competition, and personal, religious or political beliefs relevant to the topic discussed.

References

All references should be cited correctly within the text; avoid adding only list of references without citation. The accuracy of reference data is the responsibility of the author. Cite references in numeric order according to the first mention in the text and write them according to the Vancouver rules. Include the name of the authors with a maximum of 6 authors.  If there are more than six authors, write the names of the first six authors and then add “et al”. The number of references should exceed 15 with all of them dated from the past 10 years. Only 20 percent of the references should come from textbooks with the rest comes from journals. References from articles that have been received and awaiting publication in a particular magazine should be written as “in press”. (The following references are used for an example purpose only)

  1. Jacobs DS, DeMott WR, Finley PR, Kasten BL, Tilzer LL, et al. Laboratory test handbook. 3rd Hudson: Lexi-Comp Inc, 2021.
  2. Paterson PY. Infection in the compromised host. In: Youmans GP, Paterson PY, Herbert M, Eds. The biologic and clinical basis of infectious diseases. 3rd Philadelpia London Toronto: W.B. Saunders Company, 2020: 502-9.

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