Clinical Pharmacy Research Report:
Topic: “Impact of Interprofessional Collaborative Care on Health Disparities: Pharmacist Roles”
- Role of Pharmacists in the Interprofessional Care Team for Patients with Chronic Diseases This article discusses how pharmacists’ involvement in interprofessional teams can help address health disparities in chronic disease management.
- Interprofessional Collaboration: The Key to Optimal Patient Outcomes This piece highlights the importance of interprofessional collaboration, including pharmacists, in achieving optimal patient outcomes.
Focus on:
- Emphasize the role of the pharmacist on a team. prioritizing the paper as team as the focus of intervention, not focusing primarily on the work of a pharmacist on the team.
- Include evaluative data and outcomes as prioritized for this paper
Note: Important things to follow:
—- Please find the following information for the format to follow:—–
Clinical Pharmacy Research Reports: These are full-length original research articles, representing innovations in clinical pharmacy practice and practice-based implementation science such as the impact of clinical pharmacy services on patient outcomes, drug safety, medication optimization and economic outcomes, including international clinical pharmacy services and clinical pharmacist credentialing and privileging. Authors of retrospective chart reviews should review these 10 points of guidance (Bauman JL, et al. J Am Coll Clin Pharm 2019; 2:6-7.) to ensure high-quality, methodologic rigor before initiating a retrospective chart review and submitting their results for publication in JACCP. If this guidance is used in the preparation of the manuscript, it should be cited in the Methodology section of the manuscript.
The EQUATOR Network collects more than 370 reporting guidelines for many study types. Randomized trials should adhere to CONSORT guidelines. Observational studies should adhere to the STROBE guidelines. Qualitative Research should adhere to the SRQR guidelines. Quality improvement studies should adhere to the SQUIRE guidelines. Economic evaluations should adhere to the CHEERS guidelines. Search the EQUATOR Network for guidelines that apply to your study type, adhere to them, and cite them in the Methods section of your manuscript.
Word and reference limits: Text: 2000 words, excluding abstract, references, tables, and figures; Structured Abstract: 300 words; References: 50 maximum.
Abstracts must conform to the format outlined here, please click the link below:
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/policy/structured_abstracts.html
Format:
Follow this format at the link provided: https://accpjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/jac5.1576
Guidelines:
- Title. A short informative title containing the major key words. The title should not contain abbreviations (see Wiley’s best practice SEO tips),
- Running Title. A short running title of less than 40 characters,
- Authors. The full name of each authors, the authors’ academic degree(s), and fellowship in ACCP (FCCP;). DO NOT include: board certifications, fellowships in other professional associations, bachelor degree if obtained prior to terminal degree (e.g. B.S., Pharm.D.; B.S., M.D.), licenses, nor degree candidate status. Graduate degrees (e.g., MBA, M.S. MPH, Ph.D.) should follow professional degrees, (e.g., B.S. Pharm, M.D., Pharm.D.). List each author’s institutional affiliations where the work was conducted, with a footnote for the author’s present address if different from where the work was conducted. Please refer to the journal’s Authorship policy in the Editorial Policies and Ethical Considerations section for details on author listing eligibility.
- Acknowledgments. Contributions from anyone who does not meet the criteria for authorship should be listed, with permission from the contributor, in an Acknowledgements section. Sources of financial and material support should also be listed. If the manuscript is a clinical trial, include the registration number and name of public registry. Thanks to anonymous reviewers are not appropriate.
- Conflict of interest statement. Authors will be asked to provide a conflict of interest statement during the submission process. For details on what to include in this section, see the Conflict of Interest section in the Editorial Policies and Ethical Considerations section. Submitting authors should ensure they liaise with all co-authors to confirm agreement with the final statement
- Abstract and keywords (if required). A structured abstract is required for the following submission types – Clinical Pharmacy Research Report, Advances in Clinical Pharmacy Education & Training, and International Clinical Pharmacy Practice Reports. Methods should include reference to the specific guidelines adhered to based on study design and utilization of the EQUATOR Network of guidelines.
- Keywords. Please provide 3-7 keywords. Keywords should be taken from those recommended by the US National Library of Medicine’s Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) browser list at www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh.
- Main text;
- Headings.: The main text of the paper should include appropriate headings. First-level headings are typed as upper case, bold, flush left; second-level headings are upper and lower case, bold, flush left; third-level headings are upper and lower case, flush left.
- Abbreviations. Terms should not be abbreviated unless they are used repeatedly in the manuscript and an abbreviation would be helpful to the reader. Initially, use the word in full, followed the abbreviation in parentheses.
- Trade Names. Chemical substances should be referred by the generic name only. Do not use trade names.
- Measurements and units. Measures and units should be reported in metric system. SI units are not acceptable.
- Numbers. Numbers under 10 should be spelled out except for measurements with a unit (6 weeks old) or lists with numbers (11 dogs, 9 cats, 4 gerbils).
- References. Authors should only cite the most current and relevant references. Resources should be cited in AMA format. Authors should be mindful of the maximum number of references permitted for the submission category (see Manuscript Categories and Requirements in the JACCP Author Guidelines).
- Word Count. Upon submission you will need to indicate the number of words in the main text – excluding abstract, references, tables, and figure legends.
- Tables. Es (each table should be complete with title and footnotes, and supplied as a separate, editable file. Upon submission you will need to indicate the number of tables included in the manuscript.).
- Figures and figure legends. Each figure and its legend should be supplied together, but separate from other files containing main text, tables, or other figures. Figure Count. Upon submission you will need to indicate the number of figures or images included in the manuscript.
- Appendices (if relevant).
References
Do not cite personal communications, manuscripts in preparation, preprint publications, or other unpublished data.
References are in the style of the U.S. National Library of Medicine and used in Index Medicus. For more information about this reference style, please see https://www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/uniform_requirements.htm
Tables
Tables should be self-contained and complement, not duplicate, information contained in the text. They should be supplied as editable files, not pasted as images. Legends should be concise but comprehensive – the table, legend, and footnotes must be understandable without reference to the text. All abbreviations must be defined in footnotes. Footnote superscript letters: a, b, c, …, should be used (in alphabetical order) and *, **, *** should be reserved for P-values. Statistical measures such as SD or SEM should be identified in the headings.
Figures
Although authors are encouraged to send the highest-quality figures possible, for peer-review purposes, a wide variety of formats, sizes, and resolutions are accepted. Click here for the basic figure requirements for figures submitted with manuscripts for initial peer review, as well as the more detailed post-acceptance figure requirements.
Figures submitted in color will be reproduced in color online free of charge. Please note changes in colors may be suggested to comply with journal style or improve legibility.
Supporting Information Supporting information is information that is not essential to the article, but provides greater depth and background. It is hosted online and appears without editing or typesetting. It may include tables, figures, videos, datasets, etc.
Click here for Wiley’s FAQs on supporting information.
Note: if data, scripts, or other artifacts used to generate the analyses presented in the paper are available via a publicly available data repository, authors should include a reference to the location of the material within their paper.
Click here for a downloadable PDF of the Author Submission Checklist